The nation’s leading wild horse advocacy organization, the American Wild Horse Campaign (AWHC), has blasted the U.S. Forest Service for its plan to sell off federally-protected wild horses in California for just $1 apiece beginning January 10.
Horses being sold are held at the Double Devil Corrals in the Modoc National Forest and include yearlings and weanlings separated from their mothers at less than six months old.
© 2012 by BLM New window.
The horses in question were rounded up four months ago from the Devil’s Garden Wild Horse Territory in the Modoc National Forest near Alturas, CA.
The move comes just weeks after Congress prohibited the Forest Service from selling wild horses without limitations on slaughter. While the $1-a-piece sale, beginning Friday, will be done “with limitation on slaughter” AWHC says it has the potential to undermine the Congressional prohibition.
“The Forest Service is treating these national treasures like trash by selling them for one dollar apiece, sending a strong message that our cherished wild horses are throwaway animals who lack value,” said Mary Koncel, Policy Specialist for AWHC who has spearheaded AWHC’s work to protect the Devil’s Garden horses.
“Offering wild horses at fire sale prices is the Forest Service’s way of sidestepping Congress’ recent prohibition by increasing the likelihood of these horses ending up in the slaughter pipeline.
“Imagine the public outcry if a government agency began selling bald eagles en masse to anyone who had a dollar,” she continued, noting that wild horses on public lands are federally protected by the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act of 1971, unanimously passed by Congress.
The only other animal to receive this level of protection is the American bald eagle.
In 2018, the Forest Service unveiled a plan to sell the Devil's Garden mustangs without limitation on slaughter prompting Congress to add a Forest Service wild horse slaughter ban to the final Fiscal Year 2020 spending legislation, enacted last month.
The sale-for-slaughter plan also led to the passage of California state legislation AB 128, to increase protection from slaughter for horses sold at livestock auctions.
The horses being sold are currently held at the Double Devil Corrals in the Modoc National Forest and include yearlings and weanlings who have been separated from their mothers at less than six months old.
The American Wild Horse Campaign (AWHC) is the nation’s leading wild horse protection organization, with more than 700,000 supporters and followers nationwide. AWHC is dedicated to preserving the American wild horse and burros in viable, free-roaming herds for generations to come, as part of our national heritage. In addition to advocating for protection and preservation of America’s wild herds, AWHC implements the largest wild horse fertility control program in the world through a partnership with the State of Nevada for wild horses that live in the Virginia Range near Reno.
Press release by Grace Kuhn, grace@americanwildhorsecampaign.org