Whole Foods Under Fire for Selling Beef at Expense of Wild Horses
For Immediate Release
Contact: Deniz Bolbol, [email protected], 650-248-4489
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Whole Foods Under Fire for Selling Beef at Expense of Wild Horses
Does Whole Foods’ Beef Require a Mustang-Safe Label?
Natural food giant urged to stop selling meat from animals grazed in mustang habitat
STATEMENT:
“By providing a commercial venue for CNB beef products, Whole Foods is financially endorsing and contributing to this unnecessary and inhumane removal of iconic mustangs from our public lands.”
(Austin, TX … Dec. 7, 2015) Austin-based Whole Foods’ commitment to humanely sourced meat is under question due to the natural food giant’s purchase of beef from a supplier that supported a huge and brutal roundup of wild horses from federal lands in Oregon.
The practice has resulted in one media outlet to ask whether Whole Foods needs a “mustang-safe” label on its beef.
The American Wild Horse Conservation (formerly American Wild Horse Preservation) is calling upon Whole Foods Market to stop selling beef supplied by ranchers behind the massive roundup of more than 1,000 wild horses which concluded just last month in Oregon.
The roundup was conducted to allow members of the Beatys Butte Grazing Association to run more cows on the public lands from which the wild horses are being removed. Several members of the Grazing Association supply beef to Country Natural Beef (CNB), a Burns, Ore. supplier to Whole Foods. These ranches include Roaring Springs Ranch, the Fitzgerald Group, Fitzgerald Ranch and Otley Brothers Ranch.
Stacy Davies, the head of the Beatys Butte Grazing Association is also the marketing director for Country Natural Beef and manager of Roaring Spring Ranch. Mr. Davies has been a vocal proponent for the mass removal of mustangs from the Beatys Butte Herd Management Area, which is federally-designated as wild horse habitat.
In addition to Beatys Butte, CNB suppliers also hold permits in other Oregon-based Herd Management Areas that saw horse roundups this year. In total, the BLM wants to remove 2,000 wild horses – nearly half the state’s remaining wild horse population – from public lands in Oregon.
In a letter to Whole Foods, AWHC stated: “Whole Foods’ sale of beef from entities that graze cattle on public lands in designated mustang habitat fuels a system that brutalizes these iconic animals and denies them a federally declared right to be free on our public lands. Clearly, this is not in line with Whole Foods’ customer values or its principles of Environmental Stewardship.”
Each year, pressure from ranchers who graze cattle and sheep in designated wild horse habitat results in roundups throughout the West. Many ranchers view iconic mustangs as competition for cheap, taxpayer-subsidized grazing land.
As a result, thousands of wild horses are chased down by helicopter, stressed, put at risk for injury and death, separated from their families (bands) and removed from their native land.
Only a handful of horses are adopted out to new homes, while more than 50,000 are warehoused for life in taxpayer-funded holding facilities. In fact, there are now as many wild horses in holding facilities as remain free on the range.
AWHC noted that wild horses and burros inhabit less than 20 percent of public land available for livestock grazing, so conflicts between mustangs and ranchers should be resolvable.
AWHC has urged Whole Food to adopt a mustang and burro safe policy that prohibits the sale of beef or lamb sourced from animals grazing on public lands in federally designated wild horse and burro habitat areas.
The organization added that: “Support and action from Whole Foods would create a force for change to protect these national icons and secure fairer and more humane treatment of them by our federal government.”
The American Wild Horse Conservation (formerly American Wild Horse Preservation) is dedicated to defending America’s wild horses and burros to protect their freedom, preserve their habitat, and promote humane standards of treatment. AWHC’s mission to preserve and protect wild horses and burros in viable free-roaming herds on public lands for generations to come is endorsed by a coalition of more than 60 horse advocacy, public interest, and conservation organization.
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More Information
Eyewitness Report:
Beatys Butte Roundup, November 4- November 14, 2015
News Releases:
BLM Forced to Allow Public to See Massive Mustang Roundup, November 4, 2015
Massive Roundup of 1,500 Wild Horses Begins in Oregon This Week, November 2, 2015
Tens of Thousands of Citizens Oppose Massive Oregon Mustang Roundup, October 27, 2015
News Articles:
Wild Horse Roundup Nets Hundreds in Southern Oregon, Public News Service, November 11, 2015
Federal Government Begins Large Wild Horse Roundup, Associated Press, November 2, 2015
Federal Wild Horse Roundup in Progress (Photos), CBS 13 – KVAL
Wild Horse Advocates Challenge BLM Roundup Plan, Oregon Public Broadcasting, October 28, 2015