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Sunday, October 18, 2009

What Sue Wallis’ proposed HORSE ACT of 2009 Really Means for Horses

Equine Welfare Alliance

WALLIS SAYS HORSE ACT of 2009.
TRANSLATION UNACCOUNTABLE, IRRESPONSIBLE OWNERS ACT of 2009
WALLIS SAYS Horse owners and concerned citizens from across the Nation have come together
with real solutions to ensure the humane care, management, and euthanasia of
horses; to ensure the long-term sustainability and viability of the equine industry; and
to restore the market for all horses. There is no disagreement whatsoever that all
animals should be treated humanely from birth through death.
TRANSLATION Wallis believes horse owners should be allowed to own and breed irresponsibly
as many horses as they choose without regard to the future of these horses.
When they are tired of them, can’t sell the excess or can no longer use them,
these owners should be allowed to escape any responsibility though one final
act of abuse and cruelty and they should receive a financial reward for this
betrayal.
WALLIS SAYS Current federal legislation pertaining to horses, H.R. 503, “Prevention of Cruelty to
Equines,” its corresponding Senate bill S. 727, are misguided “feel good” bills that at
first glance, and to a misinformed, emotionally manipulated public seem to protect
horses—while, in fact, they do exactly the opposite. These bills and their horrific
unintended consequences institutionalize and codify a miserable, cruel, and barbaric
death for hundreds of thousands of horses. Horses suffer from starvation,
abandonment, and neglect by owners unable to sell or give their horses away.
Ultimately, these bills would spell the end to the use and enjoyment of horses by
American citizens.
2 John Holland | Vicki Tobin, Equine Welfare Alliance | October 18, 2009
THE REALITY Horses are abused, starved and neglected with or without the availability of
slaughter. Studies have proven that incidents increase and decrease in direct
correlation to the economy and unemployment. The largest case of horse
neglect in the US occurred in 2005 when all three slaughter plants were in
operation.
Any opposition to horse slaughter is defined and grossly exaggerated by antihorse
groups as emotional. The entire HORSE Act paragraph above is a play on
emotions without any facts to support these statements. Claiming that the
proposed anti-slaughter legislation could spell the end of our enjoyment of
horses is an emotional and transparently ridiculous scare tactic.
Ending slaughter has no impact on the ability of American citizens to use and
enjoy horses.
WALLIS SAYS Concerned citizens who sincerely seek the well-being of horses should understand
that animals of all kinds require management and control. No jurisdiction in the
country allows feral animals or native wildlife to reproduce unchecked to the point
where they have eliminated their resource base and are starving, dying, and
destroying the environment for all other species. The same immutable laws of nature
apply to horses. To protect people and the environment, horses must be sold,
adopted or used by someone who has the resources to care for them, or be
humanely euthanized, just like the local small animal shelter euthanizes unadoptable
animals.
THE REALITY The wild horses have been proven by DNA testing NOT to be feral but true
descendents of Mustangs that roamed our lands for thousands of years. No
scientific evidence has been provided to justify removal of wild horses from
public lands. If the public lands can sustain over 7.5 million privately owned
cattle, the land can surely sustain 50,000 wild horses. The GAO study has
determined that the range deterioration was a result of the cattle, not the
horses.
WALLIS SAYS Euthanasia is defined as a “good death” that is quick, painless and as stress-free as
possible. After euthanasia is provided, all legal, moral and ethical obligations for the
well-being and care of that animal ceases. How the carcass is disposed of, or utilized,
is entirely the prerogative, right, and responsibility of the animal’s owner.
THE REALITY The recommended method to end a horse’s life by all major veterinarian
organizations is by humane euthanasia administered by a licensed veterinarian.
A horse’s life is not ended by humane euthanasia at slaughter plants. Ending
horse slaughter will not remove an owner’s options for disposal following
humane euthanasia. The horse can be buried (if permitted in their area),
rendered or cremated. The only difference is that the owner will NOT be PAID to
dispose of his/her horse and the horse will not endure the horrors involved in
the trip to and processing at a slaughter plant.
The misuse of the word euthanasia by anti-horse groups and the HORSE Act is
an attempt to equate slaughter with a procedure performed by veterinarians.
Horses are NOT euthanized at slaughter plants. The AAEP defines euthanasia as
a “veterinary procedure.”
WALLIS SAYS For animals that have been trusted companions, loyal partners, and pets, this will
generally mean a respectful burial or cremation depending on the owner’s philosophy
and resources. For others the most appropriate option might be delivery to a
rendering plant or a landfill. Rendering plants reduce animal carcasses to oils and
useful by-products such as soap, glycerin, lubricants, inks, cleansing creams,
shampoo, glue, antifreeze, explosives, and paints. Most small animal shelters utilize
rendering plants for carcass disposal, as do livestock producers who occasionally have
carcasses unsuitable for processing.
THE REALITY All animals deserve a humane death whether they are pets, work, service or
sport animals.
The Horse Act does not address slaughter as a means of disposal for animals
that are work, service, sport and therapy animals. The horses in these categories
receive care through-out their careers that includes many drugs that are
prohibited for food animals. These animals have been entering the food chain
despite the fact that they have received medications that are explicitly
prohibited.
Failure of the Horse Act to address this issue is disingenuous and ignoring the
majority of horses that are currently being sent to slaughter. The types of horses
that are being sent to slaughter will no longer be accepted as a food source.
WALLIS SAYS Because horses are traditional food animals in most of the world, there is a viable
export market for horse meat. Many horse owners either need, or wish to recoup the
monetary value of their unusable horse, or a horse they can no longer support, and
are comfortable with this solution; especially if they can be assured that their animals
are humanely killed.
4 John Holland | Vicki Tobin, Equine Welfare Alliance | October 18, 2009
THE REALITY Horses are not food animals in the US and the US is not responsible for
providing a luxury food source to elite diners in foreign countries. We wouldn’t
think of providing dog and cat meat to Asian markets so why would we provide
horses to foreign markets?
According to the American Horse Council, the horse industry earns
approximately 39 billion dollars directly and 102 billion dollars indirectly from
horses every year. In comparison, horse owners are paid only 3 cents for every
$100 these horses earn.
$300 does not recoup a significant proportion of the monetary value for the
care and ownership of a horse. To suggest so is utterly ridiculous. Horse
slaughter is nothing more than an owner getting paid to dispose of his/her
horse vs. paying a small amount to humanely end his/her horse’s life.
The H.O.R.S.E. Act of 2009 is being proposed to include the following:
WALLIS SAYS Require that all horses to be euthanized must be humanely killed using a method that
is approved by the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) and the
American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP).
THE REALITY Both the AVMA and AAEP support humane euthanasia administered by a
licensed veterinarian as the preferred method. The AAEP, in regard to the
captive bolt states, that the animal must be calm, sedated or humanely
restrained – none of which occurs at a slaughter plant.
This is another attempt to misuse guidelines that were created by veterinarians
for veterinarians to support the slaughtering of American horses. The
Veterinarians for Equine Welfare (VEW) have produced a white paper¹ opposing
horse slaughter and the use of the captive bolt. VEW is comprised of
veterinarians that are members of AVMA and/or AAEP.
WALLIS SAYS Recommend that state and local agencies responsible for overseeing equine rescue,
recovery, and retirement operations (that accept unusable and unwanted horses, as
well as horses that owners cannot support, for a fee or for no charge), follow AAEP
“Care Guidelines of Equine Rescue and Retirement Facilities.” State and local livestock
agencies should ensure that horses are cared for appropriately and that owner’s
stipulations are being adhered to in terms of the disposition of the horses that have been surrendered.
THE REALITY All legitimate rescue facilities end a horse’s life by humane euthanasia. Once an
animal has been surrendered, their right to make decisions on the horses care,
ceases. The animals are surrendered because the owner can no longer care for
the horse or they don’t want the horse. Wallis appears to be proposing to force
a rescue to send a horse to slaughter or perhaps this is another way of stating
that the owner is no longer responsible or accountable except when it comes to
sending his/her horse to slaughter.
WALLIS SAYS Tighten the current transport regulations, strengthen the penalties, and provide for
the enforcement of violations of the equine transport for processing requirements.
Strengthen the provisions that would ensure these laws and regulations are enforced
at international borders.
THE REALITY Every documented incident of transport abuse has occurred within the US
borders and with horses going to slaughter pipeline points or to slaughter.
Ending slaughter will end transport issues and not require additional law
enforcement to monitor transport. Owners transporting their horses for show or
legitimate sale do not cram 50 horses into trailers meant for livestock transport.
The owners transport their horses in trailers built for horses that afford sensible,
safe transport, not in trailers built for livestock.
WALLIS SAYS Require and provide for training and certification for employees at equine processing
facilities involved in the actual humane euthanasia of horses prior to processing.
THE REALITY The captive bolt is NOT euthanasia, humane or otherwise. It is designed to stun,
not kill and does not work acceptably on horses. With their long necks, aversion
to objects intruding into their blind spot and recessed brains, horses are far
more difficult to stun than are cattle. Horses must be hit multiple times which is
in direct violation of the 1958 Humane Slaughter Act. The guidelines on the bolt
were written by veterinarians for veterinarians. According to the AAEP, the
horse must be calm, sedated or humanely restrained, none of which occurs in a
slaughter plant.
WALLIS SAYS Require signage at auctions and sales facilities that do not have a $1,000 minimum
bid requirement that indicate that horses sold may be processed.
6 John Holland | Vicki Tobin, Equine Welfare Alliance | October 18, 2009
THE REALITY Similar signage already exists. This does not address horses that are stolen and
sent to slaughter nor does it address the kill buyers that buy directly from
unsuspecting owners posing as legitimate buyers. Many horses are bought by
dealers at smaller auctions and resold to kill buyers at the larger slaughter
auctions, leaving the owner with no way of knowing the fate of the equine they
have sold.
WALLIS SAYS Require that sellers to processing facilities present the plant, or a border inspector,
with a document stating the seller consents to processing; if they have owned the
horse less than sixty days (a “canner buyer”), they must present a similar document
from the original seller, unless the horse was purchased at an auction with signage
mentioned above.
THE REALITY Who would monitor the validity of certificate and ownership of the horse? Who
would verify that the horse taken to an auction was not stolen?
WALLIS SAYS Require inspecting horses at the plant, and at international borders, and holding
those with lip tattoos or microchips that match numbers or chips that an owner has
registered with a national “do-not slaughter” registry. Such horses to be held for
forty-eight hours to allow the owner to claim the horse by paying for costs.
THE REALITY Why should the owner of a horse that has been stolen be required to pay costs
to retrieve their horse? Who is going to pay for the creation and maintenance of
a “do not slaughter” registry? Since many horses pass through multiple owners
in their lives, how is the original owner who specified the horse as nonslaughter
going to be located in 48 hours?
The state of Texas implemented a “brand inspection” program at the Beltex and
Dallas Crown slaughter plants specifically to assure that stolen horses be
identified and removed from slaughter. The state required the plants pay $2 per
horse to the Texas Southwest Cattle Raisers Association for the service. In the
years the program was in effect, no stolen horse was ever saved, though several were later determined from their hides to have been slaughtered.

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