Porterville Recorder

3 large corrals approved for wild horse roundups

- By SCOTT SONNER Associated Press

RENO, Nev. — The federal Bureau of Land Management has approved constructi­on of three new corrals to hold more than 8,000 wild horses captured on federal rangeland to accelerate horse roundups slowed by a lack of space in existing holding pens.

The bureau issued final decisions on environmen­tal assessment­s of the plans this week for the pens in Colorado, Wyoming and Utah.

The pens are the next step in plans announced last year by the administra­tion of President Donald Trump to speed up the capture of 130,000 wild horses over 10 years at an estimated cost of $1 billion.

Backers include the National Cattlemen’s Beef Associatio­n and American Farm Bureau Federation, which have pushed for the slaughter of excess horses that compete for forage with livestock grazing on U.S. lands.

Objecting to the corrals are wild horse advocates who insist the mustangs should remain in the wild and that the money would be better spent on horse fertility controls, like darting mares on the range with contracept­ive drugs.

“Expanding capacity to hold captured mustangs is the first step to implementi­ng this administra­tion’s reckless plan to round up the vast majority of the West’s wild horses and burros,” American Wild Horse Campaign spokeswoma­n Grace Kuhn said.

Her group is considerin­g an appeal, which would have to be filed within 30 days.

The government currently holds about 50,000 horses in off-range corrals and pastures at an annual cost of about $50 million.

About 95,000 remain on the range. That is “more than triple the number of animals the land can sustainabl­y support in balance with other public resource values, including wildlife, recreation, livestock grazing, energy resource developmen­t and others,” the bureau said Wednesday.

With virtually no predators, the horse population can double every four to five years, the agency said. Agency officials have said the appropriat­e number of horses roaming free — called “appropriat­e management level,” with the acronym AML — is about 27,000.

The new corrals would be built on private land and operated by contractor­s near Canon City, Colorado; Sutherland, Utah and Wheatland, Wyoming. An existing corral near Axtel, Utah would be expanded. The agency hasn’t provided any cost estimates.

State and county officials in Utah, Wyoming and Colorado also support expanding holding capacity.

“The creation of contractin­g for off-range corrals is a critical first step in the achievemen­t of AML on the public lands,” the Utah Public Lands Policy Coordinati­ng Office said.

The Wyoming Department of Agricultur­e, Utah’s Beaver County Commission and Colorado’s White River and Douglas Creek Conservati­on Districts also filed formal comments supporting the project.

“We assert that the management of wild freeroamin­g horses and burros requires the BLM to constantly manage the population and herd size of these animals and that gathering excess animals as they approach AML is compulsory and necessary for health of the animals and the rangeland,” the Beaver County Commission said.

Wyoming’s agricultur­e department said a roundup there recently was suspended because there wasn’t enough room in off-range corrals.

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