Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Push to Accelerate Mustang Captures Draws Fire in Congress
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
December 12, 2019

Share

RENO, Nev. — Two House committee chairmen are trying to put the brakes on money for a new Trump administration proposal to accelerate the capture of 130,000 wild horses across the West over the next 10 years.

“It’s a sweeping betrayal of America’s wild herds by the nation’s largest animal welfare groups.” Suzanne Roy, executive director of the American Wild Horse Campaign
Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nevada, whose high-desert state is home to about half the mustangs, also is among the bipartisan group of lawmakers sounding alarms about the provision in an Interior Department spending bill being readied for final congressional action.
They say it could result in the “most sweeping changes” in federal protections for mustangs and burros since President Richard Nixon signed them into law nearly a half century ago.
The proposal to speed roundups is based on a comprehensive package of proposals offered in April by an unprecedented coalition of livestock industry interests and animal welfare advocates, including the American Society For the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and Humane Society of the United States.
It’s been condemned by the largest mustang protection groups in the West that say it could lead to the extinction of the free-roaming animals.
“It’s a sweeping betrayal of America’s wild herds by the nation’s largest animal welfare groups,” said Suzanne Roy, executive director of the American Wild Horse Campaign.

There Are 88,000 Animals on U.S. Rangeland in 10 Western States

Backers include the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and American Farm Bureau Federation, which have pushed for the slaughter of excess horses that compete for forage with livestock grazing on U.S. lands.
The animal welfare groups said they’re willing to accept the accelerated roundups in some overpopulated areas to stave off the possibility Congress might otherwise resort to dropping current prohibitions on the use of federal money for slaughter.
The Bureau of Land Management estimates there are 88,000 animals on U.S. rangeland in 10 western states and nearly 47,000 in government holding pens and pastures. They agency contends the range can sustain only 27,000 but critics say there’s no scientific basis for that conclusion.
The version of the bill approved by the Senate includes $35 million for the effort. The House approved $6 million.
House Interior Chairman Raul Grijalva, D-Arizona, and House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-New York, sent the letter this week to a House-Senate panel of appropriation conferees considering a compromise version.

The Appropriation Committees Are Short-Circuiting the Normal Process

The “untested pilot project … would triple the number of horse and burros in holding and could cost taxpayers billions,” they said. It also “opens the door to surgical sterilization procedures” — something the government has never attempted on free-roaming horses and is staunchly opposed by mustang protection groups.

The letter urges conferees working to reconcile the House-Senate differences to limit any spending on the pilot program to $6 million. It’s not clear when they will act.
They said the appropriation committees are short-circuiting the normal process used to write legislation to be funded by the spending panels.
“Fundamental changes to existing law should not be done in spending bills without hearings, testimony, evidence and due consideration by the authorizing committees tasked with these responsibilities,” they wrote.
Other westerners signing the letter include Reps. Deb Haaland, D-New Mexico, chair of the Interior subcommittee on national parks, forests and public lands, Joe Neguse, D-Colorado, and California Democrats Grace Napolitano and Tony Cardenas. Two Republicans signed on — David Schweikert of Arizona and Matt Gaetz of Florida.
The letter urges conferees working to reconcile the House-Senate differences to limit any spending on the pilot program to $6 million. It’s not clear when they will act.
It also seeks clarification of language to prohibit surgical sterilization and restrict any spending for fertility control to one vaccine that’s already being used on the range.

DON'T MISS

Unlocking Campus Protests: Dive into 5 Essential Books for Deeper Insight

DON'T MISS

Sustainable Farms Need to Come Together, Not Cast Blame Over California Methane Program

DON'T MISS

California Passed a Law to Stop ‘Pay to Play’ in Local Politics. After Two Years, Legislators Want to Gut It

DON'T MISS

Stamp Dedication Ceremony in Yosemite Honors Ansel Adams’ Photography

DON'T MISS

Technology Crushing Human Creativity? Apple’s New iPad Ad Has Struck a Nerve Online

DON'T MISS

Will California Supreme Court Knock Anti-Tax Measure Off the November Ballot?

DON'T MISS

Israel Expands Gaza Offensive, Orders Rafah Evacuations

DON'T MISS

Switzerland’s Nemo Triumphs Amid Gaza War Protests at 68th Eurovision

DON'T MISS

‘They Tortured Us’: Rohingya Survivors Tell Their Stories

DON'T MISS

Former Ultra-MAGA Supporter Shares Journey of Rejecting Trumpism and GOP

UP NEXT

Former Ultra-MAGA Supporter Shares Journey of Rejecting Trumpism and GOP

UP NEXT

Pet-Owners: Watch Out for Foxtail Seed Pods That Can Harm Your Dog or Cat This Summer

UP NEXT

Beloved LA Entertainment Anchor Sam Rubin Dies at 64

UP NEXT

Auditor Looks at Fresno’s Credit Card Bills. Who Were the Biggest Spenders?

UP NEXT

US Pledges Money and Other Aid to Help Track and Contain Bird Flu on Dairy Farms

UP NEXT

California Governor Would Slash 10,000 Vacant State Jobs to Help Close $27.6 Billion Deficit

UP NEXT

Fine Dining With ‘Hardcore Farm-to-Table’ Menu Coming to NW Fresno

UP NEXT

This Small Pup Was Found in a Gutter, Clinging to Life. Now He’s Ready for a New Family.

UP NEXT

US Consumer Sentiment Drops to 6-Month Low on Inflation, Unemployment Fears

UP NEXT

Scores of Starving and Sick Pelicans Found Along the California Coast

Stamp Dedication Ceremony in Yosemite Honors Ansel Adams’ Photography

12 hours ago

Technology Crushing Human Creativity? Apple’s New iPad Ad Has Struck a Nerve Online

12 hours ago

Will California Supreme Court Knock Anti-Tax Measure Off the November Ballot?

13 hours ago

Israel Expands Gaza Offensive, Orders Rafah Evacuations

1 day ago

Switzerland’s Nemo Triumphs Amid Gaza War Protests at 68th Eurovision

1 day ago

‘They Tortured Us’: Rohingya Survivors Tell Their Stories

1 day ago

Former Ultra-MAGA Supporter Shares Journey of Rejecting Trumpism and GOP

1 day ago

Fresno Partnering with Home Repair Company That Was Once Fined Millions

Politics 101 /

1 day ago

Navigating the Comfort Food Culture Trends and Insights

1 day ago

Pet-Owners: Watch Out for Foxtail Seed Pods That Can Harm Your Dog or Cat This Summer

1 day ago

Unlocking Campus Protests: Dive into 5 Essential Books for Deeper Insight

Every so often, a cause ignites a sustained fury on college campuses across the nation. In 2020, it was Black Lives Matter. In 2011, it was ...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

Unlocking Campus Protests: Dive into 5 Essential Books for Deeper Insight

10 hours ago

Sustainable Farms Need to Come Together, Not Cast Blame Over California Methane Program

11 hours ago

California Passed a Law to Stop ‘Pay to Play’ in Local Politics. After Two Years, Legislators Want to Gut It

12 hours ago

Stamp Dedication Ceremony in Yosemite Honors Ansel Adams’ Photography

12 hours ago

Technology Crushing Human Creativity? Apple’s New iPad Ad Has Struck a Nerve Online

13 hours ago

Will California Supreme Court Knock Anti-Tax Measure Off the November Ballot?

1 day ago

Israel Expands Gaza Offensive, Orders Rafah Evacuations

1 day ago

Switzerland’s Nemo Triumphs Amid Gaza War Protests at 68th Eurovision

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend