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Wild Horses: BLM Releases 2014 Roundup Schedule Devastating to Red Desert Wild Horses
July 11, 2014
Wild Horses: Fighting to Save Wyoming’s Wild Horses is Personal
August 8, 2014

Wild Horses: Press Release – BLM Poised to Eradicate Last Large Wyoming Wild Horse Herds

Published by Carol Walker at July 23, 2014
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Wild Horses in Adobe Town Running from the Helicopter

Wild Horses in Adobe Town Running from the Helicopter

Press Release:  For immediate release from The Cloud Foundation

BLM Poised to Eradicate Last Large Wild Horse Herds in Wyoming

US Congressman, Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), supports listing of wild horses as endangered species

ROCK SPRINGS, WY (July 23, 2014) – The Cloud Foundation (TCF) with 280,000 followers, as well as numerous wild horse and animal advocacy groups, condemns the Bureau of Land Management’s scheduled roundup which will eliminate all wild horses on 1.2 million acre checkerboard land (alternating one mile square sections of private and public land for 20 miles on either side of Interstate 80) within the Great Divide Basin, Adobe Town and Salt Wells Creek Herd Management Areas (HMA).  The roundup of 946 wild horses is the first step in the planned total elimination of all wild horses in Great Divide Basin and Salt Wells Creek.

“Adobe Town, Salt Wells and Great Divide Basin are home to the largest free-roaming wild horse herds left in Wyoming,” states Carol Walker, renowned equine photographer and Wild Horse Freedom Federation (WHFF) Board member. Walker has photographed the unique southwestern Wyoming herds for 10 years. “Genetic tests link the Adobe Town herd to horses re-introduced to the America’s by the Spanish in the 1500s. Great Divide Basin wild horses are descended from Cavalry remounts,” she continues.  “To lose the wild horses in this vast landscape known by local residents as the ‘Big Empty’ would be to lose touch with our western history, heritage, and the untamed spirit of the West.”

The roundups, aimed at appeasing the powerful Rock Springs Grazing Association (RSGA), are in compliance with a Consent Decree between the BLM and RSGA, a back door deal allegedly encouraged by then-Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar. According to the Consent Decree the BLM agrees to zero out Divide Basin and Salt Wells, arguing that these unfenced wild lands allow mustangs to freely roam into private land in the checkerboard areas. Yet even in the Adobe Town HMA, which contains only a small portion of land within the checkerboard, the BLM intends to slash the herd by 100% leaving only 500 horses on over 400,000 acres of federal lands.

While BLM and RSGA contend that 1,912 wild horses overpopulate the 2.4 million acres within the HMA’s, TCF and WHFF research reveals that 356,222 cattle and 45,206 sheep graze the same lands under federally subsidized grazing leases. While cattle and sheep are not on the range year round like wild horses, the monthly average of 68,740 cattle and 10,741 sheep is staggering compared to fewer than 2,000 wild horses.  Livestock, not wild horses overpopulate and degrade the rangelands

TCF and other advocate groups question the legality of BLM’s Decision to reduce herd levels far below Appropriate Management Levels (AMLs) set in their own Resource Management Plans, and without an Environmental Assessment as required by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

“Wild horse and burro herds and the federal lands on which they roam are under fire from those seeking to control land currently owned by the American public,” states Ginger Kathrens, Volunteer Executive Director of TCF.  Since 1971 wild horses and burros have lost over 20 million acres of habitat. 339 wild horse herds were designated for protection on western ranges when the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act was passed. Today only 179 herds remain. 70% of the remaining herds are no longer genetically viable due to their small herd sizes. The intent of the forward thinking, environmentally sound and unanimously passed 1971 Act has been totally ignored by the agency charged with protecting wild horses and burros.

As recently as July 10, Utah Representative Chris Stewart introduced HR 5058, The Wild Horse Oversight Act of 2014 which, according to a Salt Lake Tribune article, “could allow states to sell wild horses to slaughter.”

“Apparently, Congressman Stewart is not satisfied with the sweetheart deal welfare ranchers have had for decades, in which they pay virtually nothing to run their cattle and sheep on land owned by the American public,”  Kathrens says. She also attributes the dire situation to BLM’s bungling of the Wild Horse and Burro Program. “BLM has turned their back on management practices that would allow for the animals to live out their lives in freedom, rather than languishing in costly holding pens and pastures.”

“Wild horses are between a rock and a hard place.  The BLM wants to eliminate them in Wyoming, and Utah Congressman Stewart wants states to have the authority to eliminate them on federal rangeland,” states Paula Todd King, TCF Director of Communications. “This is why The Cloud Foundation joined Friends of Animals in filing a Petition to List North American Wild Horses under the Endangered Species Act.”

“With the myriad of threats posed to the remaining wild horse herds in America, it is past time that we look to science to guide their management on our public lands,” states US Representative Raul Grijalva (AZ).  “I support The Cloud Foundation’s call for wild horses to be federally protected under the ESA.”

The ESA petition’s introduction states:

The primary threats to wild horses on federal public land are habitat loss, inadequate regulation, and excessive round-ups and removals. Overall, wild horses on federal public lands face the threat of extinction due to at least four factors identified in the ESA. First, habitat loss, particularly from cattle grazing, mining, energy exploration, and urban expansion, endangers the distinct population segment (“DPS”). Second, human utilization threatens the species, specifically removal and sterilization to reduce the population and allow commercial grazing. Third, existing regulatory mechanisms are inadequate to manage the threats that face wild horses and may, in fact, constitute an independent threat to their survival. Finally, other natural and manmade factors also threaten the continued existence of wild horses in the United States, including their artificially fragmented range and small population size. Thus, it is vital to the survival of this population segment of wild horses that it becomes federally protected under the ESA

 

Here is the BLM’s Response to this Press Release, plus a poll where you can answer the question “Should Wild Horses be Removed from the Checkerboard?”

http://www.sweetwaternow.com/cloud-foundation-blm-poised-eradicate-last-large-wild-horse-herds-wyoming-blm-responds/

LINKS:

Livestock far Outnumber Wild Horses Targeted for Removal in Wyoming, Chart by TCF & WHFF

http://www.thecloudfoundation.org/images/7.23.14prwyru.pdf

BLM Schedules Wild Horse Removal from Checkerboard Lands

http://www.blm.gov/wy/st/en/info/news_room/2014/july/18rsfo-removal.html

Decision Record and Categorical Exclusion

http://www.blm.gov/wy/st/en/info/NEPA/documents/rsfo/Checkerboard.html

Federal Court Sanctions Gov’t Plans to Eliminate Wild Free-Roaming Horses from Wyoming Checkerboard

http://www.thecloudfoundation.org/news/press-releases/217-federal-court-sanctions-gov-t-plans-to-eliminate-wild-free-roaming-horses-from-wyoming-checkerboard

How the Department of Interior Sold Out America’s Wild Horses

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2013/03/how-the-department-of-the-interior-sold-out-americas-wild-horses/274159/

Ranchers are Scapegoating Wild Horses says BLM Scientist

http://www.thecloudfoundation.org/news/press-releases/247-ranchers-are-scapegoating-wild-horses-says-blm-scientist

Wild Horse Oversight Act

https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/113/hr5058/text

Bill: Allow Utah, states to more aggressively manage wild horses

http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/58190806-90/horses-bill-wild-stewart.html.csp

Petition to List a North American Distinct Population Segment of

Wild Horse (Equus caballus) under the U.S. Endangered Species Act

http://www.thecloudfoundation.org/images/pdf/Final_Petition_Complete_As_Filed.pdf

Media Contacts:

Paula Todd King

The Cloud Foundation

843-592-0720

paula@thecloudfoundation.org

The Cloud Foundation (TCF) is a Colorado based 501(c)3 non-profit organization dedicated to the protection and preservation of wild horses and burros on our western public lands.

Spread the word

6 Comments

  1. michelle says:
    July 24, 2014 at 1:46 pm

    I am really saddened by this news. They need to be protected from the greed of this nation. They deserve to live wild on public land just like every other wild animal.

    Reply
  2. Jean Riggs says:
    August 17, 2014 at 1:26 pm

    Remember the Buffalo

    Reply
  3. Darcy says:
    August 18, 2014 at 5:58 am

    What happened to wild horse adoptions? Why not continue training and adopting out the horses as before? Geld the stallions. Some may be too old to gentle for riding, but could be used for rodeo stock until they are in need for euthansia. I think the program they had this year on the mustang challenge could help this situation. I would like to work with the younger ones to get them ready for adoptions or sale to homes. Some horses could be broke for ranch work and sold and money go to BLM to fund the program. They could be brought to the Boise corrals for training and adoption or sale to save as many as possible for use in stock yards also. We have time until it is too cold to work with them. Darcy

    Reply
    • Carol Walker says:
      September 3, 2014 at 8:59 pm

      Dear Darcy,
      Wild Horse adoptions are completely inadequate to take care of all the wild horses that are brought in each year and those over 50,000 that are already in holding. training does help adoption, but with people not having the money to keep or buy already trained domestic horses there is not enough of a market to absorb all these horses. the true solution is to STOP the roundups and manage our wild horses in the wild where they belong.

      Reply
    • Tiio-Mai McCurty says:
      November 23, 2014 at 5:08 pm

      I believe those horses and burros need to be free! Using the horses and burros for other human so called needs is not the same! It makes a big diffrence to see horses living free and they do have the right to live and to be free! It is hard for me to face what happens still today in USA with those horses and I feel this will be ominous for the nation, for who is for wipeout wild living horses just like that because business would do the same with humen! … is already happening by not caring for those who love and try to safe lifes and rights of those horses and burros. That all hurts me deeply!!!

      Reply
  4. Angela Rose says:
    November 1, 2014 at 10:56 pm

    THIS IS TERRIBLE! How and Where do these beaurocrates get the right to do this to our beautiful landscapes and beautiful wild

    Reply

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