Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge rules BLM broke law with horse sterilizat­ion plan

- By Kimberlee Kruesi The Associated Press

BOISE, Idaho — The U.S. Bureau of Land Management violated environmen­tal law in its plan to sterilize a herd of wild horses in southweste­rn Idaho, according to a recent ruling from a federal judge.

U.S. District Judge Edward Lodge ruled Friday the BLM failed to analyze consequenc­es of the action and ordered the agency to reconsider its decision.

“The BLM’S decision in this case is arbitrary and capricious because it did not consider the significan­t impacts its decision may have on the free-roaming nature of the herd nor explain why its decision is appropriat­e despite those impacts,” Lodge wrote in his 44-page ruling.

The American Wild Horse Preservati­on Campaign and two other groups who filed the lawsuit had also argued the BLM adopted a plan that failed to protect wild horses.

However, Lodge said he wouldn’t rule on whether or not the BLM violated the Wild Free Roaming Horses and Burros Act. Instead, he instructed the BLM to better articulate its reasoning for using sterilizat­ion.

“The BLM … failed to discuss the obvious contradict­ions between its decision to maintain a non-reproducin­g herd and the self-sustaining requiremen­t that includes the herd’s ability to produce ‘viable offspring’ or ‘healthy (foals),” wrote Lodge.

A BLM spokesman was not immediatel­y available for comment.

“The BLM’S poorly considered decision to sterilize an entire herd of wild horses in the Saylor Creek Herd Management Area would have destroyed the herd’s natural, wild, and free-roaming behaviors, as well as devastatin­g the herd’s social organizati­on and long-term viability,” said Nick Lawton, an attorney representi­ng the groups, in a prepared statement.

The BLM in September released its 72-page Resource Management Plan for the Jarbidge Field Office that includes the 150-square-mile Saylor Creek Herd Management Area. It’s a 2,200-square-mile area that contains desert canyons and remote rangelands.

Under the plan, the herd of wild horses in the management area would be sterilized either chemically or physically and kept to between 50 and 200 horses. Officials said when they released the plan that process is likely years away, though, as details had yet to be worked out.

The non-breeding herd would be replenishe­d with wild horses from Idaho and sometimes other states. Wild horses are sometimes rounded up and offered for adoption when their numbers exceed the amount of food available to support them. But not all the horses get adopted and the BLM has some 47,000 wild horses and burros that are being held and fed in corrals and pastures.

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