By Bill Croke on 11.9.09 @ 6:07AM
There'll be no death panels for our nation's aging mustangs.
The West has been home to wild horses since the days of the
conquistadores. For instance, the 1680 Pueblo rebellion that
expelled the Spaniards from New Mexico for twelve years scattered
large herds into the hands of the tribes of the Southern Plains.
Today, there are Spanish bloodlines present in wild stock found
as far north as Montana.
Rounding up mustangs destined for the leather tannery or
the dog food factory used to be the formula for keeping the
public lands herds numbers at manageable levels. But gone are the
days of The Misfits, John Huston's 1961
film about wild horse wranglers in Nevada. In 1971, the federal
"Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act" outlawed rounding up
horses for slaughter. Afterwards, an annual quota of mustangs was
collected by Bureau of Land Management (BLM) personnel from herds
in ten Western states and offered locally for public adoption.
But the weak economy has caused adoptions to shrink in recent
years. With feeding, shelter, vet bills, etc., it costs thousands
of dollars a year to keep a horse. And breaking a mustang to the
saddle is hard work that might require a paid, professional
cowboy to perform.
Americans are not tolerant of animal cruelty, witness the
Michael Vick dog-fighting scandal. Even the morality of legal
hunting is more and more questioned by an increasingly
politically correct populace. Some think burgeoning whitetail
deer numbers in the East should rate birth control for suburban
Bambis. In the West, it's the wild horses. "The fact is that the
American public has shown that it does not want to have
slaughtering of these animals," Secretary of the Interior (BLM is
under the purview of the Department of the Interior) Ken Salazar
recently stated.
Approximately 37,000 mustangs roam degraded BLM rangelands
(where they compete with domestic cattle for grass on leased
grazing allotments) in those ten Western states. Another 32,000
(for a 69,000 total) have been rounded up and corralled in BLM
"holding facilities." According to the
Washington Post, 3,706 horses were adopted
in 2008, down from 5,701 in 2005. All this (the roundups, the
holding facilities, feeding, the BLM adoption process
bureaucracy, etc.) costs taxpayers $50 million annually, with a
projected estimate of $85 million for fiscal year 2012. The U.S.
Congress finds this intolerable.
In July the House of Representatives passed the "Restore
Our American Mustangs Act," which would require the BLM to set
aside an additional 20 million acres of rangeland for the horses.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates the total cost of the
bill at $500 million. The Senate has yet to weigh in. But
Interior Secretary Salazar has an alternative plan.
He recently proposed a program that would move the 32,000
detained horses to seven preserves in the East and Midwest (the
locations have yet to be disclosed). Two of these would be
financed by the taxpayers at an initial cost of $96 million, and
$1.7 million annually for the first five years. The other five
would function in partnership -- with additional federal
assistance -- between the federal government and nonprofit animal
welfare groups such as the Cloud Foundation, a wild horse
preservation group based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The
Post story goes on to say that, "All the
animals would be sterilized or segregated by sex to prevent
procreation. At the same time, the government would seek to
sterilize or control the reproduction of enough animals on the
range so that the birthrate is 3,500 foals a year." The goal is a
population of 25,000 horses on the seven preserves by 2014, with
an equal number left wild on the range and subject to
reproductive strictures. And whether Salazar's plan as a
fine-tuning of the House bill will actually save money is
comparing apples to oranges. Time -- as in years -- will
tell.
In actuality, what these projected preserves will be are
outdoor nursing homes for neutered, aging horses. Geriatric
equine petting zoos. The preserves will be open to the public,
though whether the taxpayers will be charged admission to their
horse refuges has not been established. "We think there is real
potential for ecotourism…. Everybody loves horses," Interior
spokesman Tom Gorey
told AP. All this because polls indicate that the American
people can't stomach the idea of regularly culling the herds to
produce commercially marketable horsemeat and horsehide for
leather products.
It's telling that people who, when it comes to the right to
life, have no compunction being "pro-choice," yet are horrified
by the idea of Fido feasting on Old Paint.
topics:
Ken Salazar, Restor Our American Mustangs Act