Saddle Sores
Michael Hutchins, who as the director and CEO of the Wildlife Society represents 10,000 wildlife professionals, told me this when I asked for his predictions: “I don’t think taking horses off public land and sticking them in corrals is sustainable. The cost just keeps going up and up and up. And when money is limited, how you spend it becomes an ethical issue. I think we need to give [surgical] sterilization a try, but that’s going to take many, many years. And what if it doesn’t work? Do we need to go back to considering lethal control? We have to be realistic. Are we going to continue to let horses degrade the American West? Just as with the feral-cat problem you wrote about, these are the decisions our government is going to have to make if it wants to protect native habitats and wildlife. If it’s not going to make these decisions, I don’t have a lot of hope for the future.”
If there are rays of hope, they lie in the tough stands being taken by groups like the Wildlife Society, the alarm sounded by the GAO in its 2008 report, and the fact that the ROAM bill appears stalled in the Senate. The word in Washington is that the Salazar Initiative was merely a strategy for derailing that legislation. If so, maybe our Interior Secretary struck the only blow for horse-blighted wildlife that America’s current mindset allows. And maybe he’ll do more in the future.


this artice is crap
Gosh Ted. You sound so much like The Voice of Reason and make the wild horse advocates sound like shrieking idiots. Good Job. Only thing is, you are wrong and there are so many people in the world now who know factually what is true that you ended up making yourself look - um. Let's just say...misinformed. What is happening REALLY - and we (wild horse advocates) are going to find this out - is that this land that was allocated to the wild horses is wanted for other things by people who want to be free to destroy our (allocated to the horses) western lands without any uncomfortable attention from anyone. The horses are: a) being used as a distraction for what these people don't want to be seen or: b) necessary to eradicate so wild horse advocates find something else to do and these people are left to do what they want to do in private. YOUR "wildlife," that you seem to think is being threatened by the mustang, will die right along with the horses eventually...all of it. Congrats Ted on your very wrong conclusions. And, hey, sleep well.