Thursday, October 27, 2011

Breaking News!

American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign

Bias on National Academy of Sciences Wild Horse and Burro Review Panel Revealed at Meeting Today in Reno

October 27, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment

New evidence shows panelist privately met with BLM Director and pro-horse slaughter Congresswoman to discuss removal of wild horses from public lands. 

Washington, DC - October 27, 2011 – Today, at the first meeting of a National Academy of Sciences team that is reviewing the federal wild horse and burro program, the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign (AWHPC), a national coalition, will call on the Academy to correct bias and imbalance on the review committee, as well as deficiencies in study scope.

What: First Meeting of National Academy of Sciences Wild Horse and Burro Review Committee
When: Thursday, October 27, 2011
1 p.m. – 5 p.m. Scientific Presentations
5:30 – 7:30 p.m. Public Comment
Where: Best Western Airport Plaza Hotel, 1981 Terminal Way, Reno, Nevada
The coalition will detail concerns about imbalance on the panel, and present new evidence that one of the committee members, Dr. Paul Krausman, president elect of the Wildlife Society, has actively lobbied for the removal of “feral” horses, meeting privately with both BLM director Bob Abbey and pro-horse slaughter Wyoming Congresswoman Cynthia Loomis regarding the need to “manage this non-native species.”
A second committee member, Dr. Erik Beever, is also an official with the Wildlife Society, which has a pro-hunting, anti-wild horse agenda and espouses the unscientific position that wild horses are a “potentially destructive non-native species that threatens native species and their habitats.” A third committee member, Dr. David Thain, has close ties to the livestock industry and has appeared on national television to defend the current BLM wild horse program.
“As clear partisans, these individuals cannot deliver an ‘independent’ or ‘objective’ review of the very program they have actively promoted and defended,” Deniz Bolbol, AWHPC Communications Director will tell the NAS Committee during public comments today. “At minimum, they must be balanced with experts in wild horse behavior who have advocated for reform of the current unscientific management program.”
Bolbol will also deliver her statement on behalf of the ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.).
Also at the meeting, AWHPC founder Neda DeMayo, CEO of Return to Freedom American Wild Horse Sanctuary, will address the NAS’ failure to appoint a member to the panel with expertise in the latest scientific evidence documenting that the horse evolved in North American and is a native, reintroduced wildlife species.
“The issue of the horse as a native North American species is not even within the study scope,” DeMayo will tell the committee. “How and why can this topic of the biological nature of the horse, that the agency is supposed to manage wisely, not be central to the scope of the study? The NAS’ failure to include one scientist with expertise in the latest collection of data addressing this issue castes a shadow over the credibility of work that the committee will do the next year.”
DeMayo will also raise concerns about lack of equal representation on the panel for the various fertility control methods available to manage reproduction in wild horse herds. One panel member has published extensively on Spay Vac, an immunocontraceptive drug that has potentially serious side effects, while no appointed panel member has expertise on PZP fertility control, which has been documented to be safe and effective over a 20-year history of use on wild horses.
“Unless the NAS corrects the imbalances on the panel and shortcomings in the study scope, the public’s need to have accurate and objective review of this broken federal program will not be served, the public’s perception of the NAS will be diminished, and the tax dollars underwriting the review will be wasted,” Bolbol’s statement concludes.
Click here for copy of AWHPC/ASPCA Statement to the NAS.
The American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign (AWHPC), supported by a coalition of over 45 organizations, is dedicated to preserving the American wild horse in viable free-roaming herds for generations to come, as part of our national heritage. For more information visit www.WildHorsePreservation.org.


Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under AWHPC News Releases, News











News from Equine Welfare Alliance

 

Today's News

Our newest members in Italy, the Italian Horse Protection Association, is asking for our help to sign a petition to ban street horse races in Italy. I don't have a word document of the newsletter that I can paste here so I've included a link to the PDF. I have also pasted the link to the petition and a YouTube video that are also in the newsletter.

Please take a moment to sign the petition.

FYI - Cognome is sir name
Nationalita is country where you live - scroll through the list
Click on the button INVIA to submit (Thanks to Babylon translation!)
You must also click on the Privacy button (I Authorize, within the meaning of legislative decree n. 196/2003, the use of the data included in this module)

Other news.... 
--We've been working on the Virginia Range Horses and will have something out following this email. There is a lot of wrangling going on behind the scenes and we're all hoping for an outcome that benefits the horses...


--Susan Wagner (Equine Advocates) and Jay Kirkpatrick's presentations have been posted on the conference page on the EWA site. Be sure to check them out!


--If you missed Laura Allen's excellent letter on our White House petition to ban slaughter, you can read it here: http://www.animallawcoalition.com/horse-slaughter/article/1878.


Please be sure to check out the article on The Horse Blog on the petitions, as well.


--Animals' Angels latest investigation: Bravo Packing, Carney's Point, NJ - click here


--Here is a wonderful video from Marjorie Farabee, Burros in the Mist


--Here's a short film from Sonja Meadows showing the journey of US slaughter horses from the auction to the slaughter plant.

  

--Our opponents have launched an all out assault with articles full of propaganda - the same old tired rhetoric. Please continue posting comments!


And...last but not least, EWA became a 501(c)(4) in February. We plan to try to establish funds to help with investigations, litigation for the wild ones (not initiating our own lawsuits but supporting others such as Wild Horse Freedom Federation, in their efforts). We'd also like to have funds on hand so if we have to send someone to lobby in DC or at the state level, we can do it. Our determination letter, EIN number and details are on this page - http://www.equinewelfarealliance.org/How_You_Can_Help.html












Please Submit Comments to U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Urge Protection of Wild Horses & Burros in the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge

American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign

Feds Developing 15-Year Management Plan

Please share this alert



Comments Due November 8, 2011

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) is seeking public input for the revision of its Comprehensive Conservation Plan (CCP) and Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) ("the Plan") that will set policy in the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge Complex for the next 15 years. The plan calls for total elimination of the wild horse and burro populations living in the refuge, which are estimated to be 800 horses and 90 burros.



Mustangs and burros have called these lands home for centuries, but the USFWS holds the outdated and unscientific position that these animals are non-native species that need to be eliminated. Meanwhile the agency operates Sheldon more like a game preserve than a refuge, and eliminating wild horses and burros will allow the USFWS to increase big game species, such as Pronghorn and Bighorn sheep, for hunters to shoot.


Unfortunately, because the Wild Free Roaming Horses and Burros Act protects only mustangs and burros residing on BLM and U.S. Forest Service lands, wild horses are out of luck when it comes to federal protection on Sheldon refuge lands.
In previous requests for comments, the FWS received more input about wild horses and burros than on any other management aspect of the refuge. But instead of seeking an alternative that would allow for the maintenance of wild horses on the refuge (similar to the way the National Park Service manages several wild horse herds), Sheldon has made removal of the wild horses and burros the top priority of its new management strategy. Not surprisingly, the plan is supported by pro-hunting organizations.

















This public comment period is the time to let the USFWS know that the public demands that this Refuge protect its culturally and historically significant wild horse and burro herds and manages them according to science, not special hunting interests. Please take easy action below to personalize and send your letter.  When you click send, your suggestions will be faxed to the USFWS.


U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service John Kasbohm

PO Box 111
Lakeview, OR 97630
US
Fax:(541) 947-4414




If you prefer, you can submit your comments, which must be received no later than November 8, 2011, via the USFWS online form, facsimile or U.S. postal mail to:


Use click here to use USFSW online form to provide comments
-or-
Address written comments and questions to:
John Kasbohm, Project Leader
Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge
P.O. Box 111
Lakeview, OR 97630

-or-

Fax: (541) 947-4414

Read MORE and TAKE ACTION! Click HERE.