AWHC Calls for Congressional Oversight on BLM Wild Horse Program and Moratorium on Roundups

AWHC Urges Congressional Action on BLM Wild Horse ManagementAWHC Urges Congressional Action on BLM Wild Horse Management

AWHC Cheers Colorado Governor Jared Polis’ Help in Sand Wash Basin, Plan for State Involvement

Denver, CO (September 10, 2021) — On the heels of the Bureau of Land Management’s (BLM) halted Sand Wash Basin Herd Management Area (HMA) wild horse roundup in northwest Colorado, the American Wild Horse Conservation (formerly American Wild Horse Campaign) is calling for a moratorium on helicopter roundups of wild horses amidst mounting evidence of widespread mismanagement, abuse of power, misuse of emergency declarations, and failure to account for livestock degradation of public lands within wild horse and burro Herd Management Areas (HMAs). AWHC is also calling on the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee to conduct an oversight hearing on the BLM’s management of the nation’s federally-protected wild horses and burros and the public lands.

The call comes as the BLM’s wild horse roundup in the Sand Wash Basin Herd Management Area was halted, with the help of Colorado Governor Jared Polis, after leaving a trail of documented cruelty that includes orphaned foals left alone to die on the range, horses with broken legs and other tragic injuries, horses chased for miles at high speeds and in high temperatures to pure exhaustion, then slammed into overcrowded trap pens.

“The atrocities leveled against wild horses in the Sand Wash Basin roundup were the latest in aggressive and abusive roundups unfolding in the West, most being conducted under the guise of emergency declarations that allow the BLM to short-circuit requirements for environmental analysis, public comment, and appeal,” said Suzanne Roy, Executive Director of AWHC.

Thanks to Governor Polis’ intervention, an additional 150 wild horses will remain free in the Sand Wash Basin HMA. AWHC credited the multi-stakeholder effort that achieved this outcome and included daily pressure from wild horse advocates nationally and in Colorado, including The Cloud Foundation; opposition from the environmental science community, led by the Sierra Club and Western Watersheds; and political pressure from Congressman Joe Neguse in addition to the Governor and First Gentleman Marlon Reis. AWHC called special attention to the unsung heroes at the Sand Wash Advocate Team, who were onsite daily at the roundup and had the unenviable task of separating wild horses they have protected for years into the few who would return to freedom and the many who would be held captive for life.

Between July 1 and Sept. 30, the BLM will have conducted nine emergency roundups in the West to remove 6,350 wild horses from public lands. The total number of horses and burros removed from public lands by the BLM in Fiscal Year 2021 is expected to reach 12,000. The roundups are part of an unprecedented accelerated and aggressive Trump era plan being implemented by the Biden Administration.

“Oversight from Congress is needed immediately to rein in this out-of-control federal program that’s costing taxpayers more than $100 million annually,” continued Roy. “And it’s costing thousands of these magnificent wild horses, our national icons, their freedom, their families and often, their lives.”

The decision to convene an oversight hearing is in the hands of Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva, Chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, and the Committee's Subcommittee on Public Lands, chaired by Colorado Congressman Joe Neguse.

AWHC has prepared an official complaint with the BLM seeking investigation of violations of the BLM’s Comprehensive Animal Welfare Program policies at the Sand Wash Basin roundup, including:

  • Four vulnerable foals separated from their mothers, left alone overnight in the wild, unable to nurse and left hungry.
  • Wild horses — including young foals — chased by helicopters at a high speed for miles to pure exhaustion. (Video here.)
  • Horses chased dangerously close to barbed wire fencing that is not flagged to prevent the horses from crashing through it (Photo here).
  • Horses run at top speed into crowded trap pens resulting in the trampling of foals and fighting between stallions. (Video here.)
  • Deceptively misclassifying causes of death as non-gather related for horses suffering injuries that were likely caused in the roundup including a foal exhibiting symptoms of capture shock (run to the verge of death).

AWHC urges the congressional oversight committee to hold a hearing to address the following issues:

Mismanagement of Wildlife on Public Lands

  • Failure to consider harmful impacts of widespread livestock grazing on public lands.
  • Failure to protect wildlife and the range by scapegoating wild horses instead of addressing true threats, particularly livestock impacts.
  • Killing of predators (mountain lions and wolves) that could provide natural population regulation for the benefit of the livestock industry.

Problems with Wild Horse Management

  • Unsustainable and unscientific wild horse and burro population targets (AMLs); bias in resource allocation. (Sierra Club)
  • Failure to implement fertility control, a scientifically recommended alternative to roundups. (NAS)
  • Violation of Congressional directives prohibiting slaughter and requiring adherence to Comprehensive Animal Welfare policies.
  • BLM/contractor accountability for animal welfare violations from the roundup through the holding and adoption/sale process.
  • Fiscal impacts of accelerated roundup plan to round up and pen tens of thousands of wild horses and burros at a cost to taxpayers of nearly $1 billion within 5 years and $5 billion over 15 years.
  • Misuse of emergency drought designations and bypassing required environmental and public input processes.

Photocredit: WilsonAxpe Photography

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