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Room
to roam: House votes to rescue wild horses
By KEVIN FREKING (AP) Jul 17, 2009
WASHINGTON Galloping to the aid of the nation's
wild horses and burros, the House voted Friday to rescue
them from the possibility of a government-sponsored slaughter
and give them millions more acres to roam.
But the effort may get penned up in the Senate.
The bill passed the House, 239-185, with Republican opponents
arguing that it underscored wrongheaded Democratic priorities
by focusing on animals instead of people at a time when
the nation's unemployment rate is approaching double digits.
An estimated 36,000 wild horses and burros live in 10 Western
states. Federal officials estimate that's about 9,400 more
than can exist in balance with other rangeland resources.
Off the range, more than 31,000 other wild horse and burros
are cared for in corrals and pastures.
The plan aims to reduce the number of animals kept in holding
pens awaiting adoption and to reduce the stress on land
currently set aside for them.
Supporters mobilized after the Interior Department announced
last year that it might have to kill thousands of healthy
wild horses and burros to deal with the growing population
on the range and in holding facilities.
Republicans dismissed the measure as welfare for horses,
but Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., said a majority of Americans
would not support slaughtering healthy animals or keeping
them in holding pens for years at a time.
"The status quo is a national disgrace," said
Rahall, chairman of the Committee on Natural Resources.
"It is a disgrace to our heritage."
However, no comparable bill has been sponsored in the Senate,
which doesn't bode well for final passage of the measure.
Both houses would have to approve the legislation before
it could be sent to the White House for President Barack
Obama's consideration.
Some lawmakers from Western states said Congress is mismanaging
the nation's wild horse population by preventing the Bureau
of Land Management from keeping populations at a level that's
appropriate for the environment. They said more horses will
just make the problem worse.
"This bill is based on emotion and not science,"
declared Rep. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., saying the bill would
elevate wild horses above threatened and endangered species
in her state.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated that enacting
the Restore our American Mustangs Act would cost about $200
million over the next five years. Currently, the wild herds
roam over about 33 million acres of Western land.
To comply with the bill, the Bureau of Land Management
would need to find an additional 20 million acres, primarily
after 2013, at a cost of up to $500 million, according the
CBO. But Rahall said those estimates don't reflect new language
in the bill that makes adding millions of acres of rangeland
a goal rather than a legal requirement.
Rahall said the bill would actually save the government
money by reducing the amounts now devoted to caring for
the animals in corrals and on pastures. He said slaughtering
healthy animals to control their population should not be
an option.
"How in the world can a federal agency be considering
the massive slaughter of animals the law says they are supposed
to be protecting?" he said.
While Rahall said the cost estimates were overblown, Republicans
weren't buying it. House Republican leader John Boehner
of Ohio said even debating the bill was an insult to people
looking for work and small businesses trying to keep their
doors open.
"It doesn't make any sense that we're debating a welfare
program about wild horses when the American people really
want to know, 'where are the jobs?'" Boehner said.
The bill would give the government authority to enter into
cooperative agreements to establish wild horse sanctuaries
on nonfederal lands. It also would attempt to bolster an
adoption program and sterilize more animals. It would prohibit
the killing of healthy wild horses and burros and restrict
time spent in holding pens to six months.
The Humane Society of the United States supports the legislation,
saying the current program of rounding up wild horses and
keeping them in holding pens is a "fiscal and animal
care disaster."
"We have got to get off the current treadmill of spending
millions of tax dollars rounding up wild horses and caring
for them in captivity, and instead make wider use of fertility
control as a humane population management tool," said
Wayne Pacelle, the HSUS organization's president and CEO.
In Friday's vote, 206 Democrats supported the measure and
47 opposed it.
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