House Committee Allocates $102 Million for BLM Wild Horse Roundups
WASHINGTON, DC (July 10, 2020) — Today, the nation’s leading wild horse protection organization expressed disappointment with the U.S. House Appropriations Committee’s decision to approve Fiscal Year 2021 Interior appropriations legislation, granting the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) $102 million for its wild horse and burro program. In a report delivered to Congress in May, the agency stated its intention to use the funding to round up as many as 20,000 wild horses annually from Western public lands.
The committee, by passing the bill unamended, ignored requests from key members, including U.S. House Natural Resources Chair Rep. Raul Grijalva, Public Lands Subcommittee Chair Deborah Haaland, and Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH) of the Appropriations Committee, to require the BLM to implement humane fertility control as an alternative to cruel and unsustainable roundups and to prohibit surgical sterilization of wild horses and burros.
The bill maintains the 27% budget increase Congress awarded the BLM wild horse and burro program last year after the Humane Society of the United States, the ASPCA, and Return to Freedom joined the cattle industry in lobbying for a mass wild horse roundup plan. Although these groups portrayed the plan as a humane fertility control program that did not include brutal surgical sterilization methods, they have not supported efforts by Congressman Grijalva and others to require the BLM to fund humane, reversible fertility control programs or prohibit surgical sterilization.
“The House Appropriations Committee missed an opportunity to say ‘whoa’ to the BLM’s rampant mismanagement and mistreatment of our nation’s wild horses and burros,” said Suzanne Roy, Executive Director of the American Wild Horse Conservation (formerly American Wild Horse Campaign). “Committee members just let down the American public and our iconic wild horses and burros by voting to hand over $100 million in taxpayer funds to the BLM to continue its unscientific, unsustainable, and inhumane wild horse and burro roundup program.”
The groups expressed support for the Committee’s decision to continue the ban on the slaughter of wild horses and burros under the jurisdiction of the BLM and U.S. Forest Service but vowed to continue fighting for reform of the BLM’s mismanaged wild horse roundup program, which the National Academy of Sciences has called “expensive and unproductive for the BLM and the public it serves.”
The bill now heads to the full House for a vote. The Senate version of the bill is still pending.
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The American Wild Horse Conservation (AWHC) is the nation’s leading wild horse protection organization, with more than 700,000 supporters and followers nationwide. AWHC is dedicated to preserving the American wild horse in viable, free-roaming herds for generations to come, as part of our national heritage.