Misrepresentation and Infringement

We are aware that the pro-slaughter groups United Horsemen and Protect the Harvest created a pro-slaughter propaganda video aimed at wild horses. We will not publish the link to further draw attention to this propaganda and gross misrepresentation. The link is being passed around on social media (after being posted by the pro-slaughter groups) and if you need to see it you can go to their pages.

WHE is engaged with another entity in litigation (the NACO suit) that also appears to be involved in the production of this video through mutual participants.

In no way shape or form was consent given to use our material. We would never give permission for such a project and any insinuation to the contrary is not only false, but damaging to our reputation and mission.

The misrepresentation of our material is indicative of the credibility of those perpetuating this propaganda as they reap a private profit from welfare ranching and attempt (again) to deny wild horses a drink of water in the state of Nevada all as beef profits hit an all time high.

We are seeking legal council at this time. We ask your patience as we attempt to resolve this issue. Again in no manner were we involved in this production.

The video below is of a Nevada Department of Agriculture meeting where Boyd Spratling (a member of the Dept. of Ag and also on the BLM National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board) uses photographs he obtained from a “file,” without providing any data on the photos, to further this same agenda.

A letter sent by WHE to BLM officials in the state and to the Secretary of the Interior.

We urge you to write your own.
Sample Letter:

August 4, 2012

Ken Salazar, Secretary of the Interior

Department of the Interior

1849 C Street, N.W.

Washington DC 20240

Ken Salazar,

This correspondence addresses the current drought issues in the state of Nevada with particular emphasis on the Battle Mountain District. The necessity to craft this letter has come after attending the Nevada Department of Agriculture meeting on the 31st day of July this year, 2012.

During the meeting of the Nevada Department of Agriculture Dr. Boyd Spratling presented a recommendation letter to be sent to you from the Board. At no time in his presentation did he address any site-specific (current) information. At no time during his presentation did he recognize the need to evaluate good business practices involving the overgrazing (documented) by domestic livestock on a public resource.

In light of the presentation and subsequent letter you will be receiving from the Nevada Department of Agriculture we offer the following:

First we would like to commend the Battle Mountain District for showing the forethought to create a drought plan prior to the necessity of action. Proactive management practices are sorely needed in public lands management and should be recognized when they occur.

Secondly the damage to the range by permitees that currently utilize many ranges, not only in the Battle Mountain District of BLM, must be assessed on a site-specific basis. Any permittee not protecting public resource through over grazing or causing over grazing through water hauling on public lands must be restricted. Voluntary compliance is always preferred, but if that compliance is not forthcoming formal restrictions must meet with National support.

Third the proactive actions need to be extended beyond the drought. Each use of the land causes an impact to other uses and users. As livestock permitees turn out their animals site specific monitoring of range health prior to, and post, use must be supported. Improper use of one allotment creates a greater impact to neighboring allotments as well other uses. Impacts to other uses as turnouts occur must also be monitored. Impacts to wild horse movement patterns also need to be monitored as these instances create artificial instances of wild horse impact as animals are forced into smaller and smaller areas by fence line closures and considerable numbers of domestic livestock.

In addition the current economic impact to private land grazing operations and those that must supplement feed (provide hay) is considerable. Many American farmers are taking advantage of foreign markets for their products and the price of hay has risen considerably. The current cost for a private enterprise has risen to approximately $10.00-$18.00 per cow/calf pair monthly. The American public is selling their grazing resource to private permittees at current costs from approximately $1.35-$2.00 for the same resource. Public permittees also do not pay a property tax for the grazing land they utilize. This imbalance is particularly unfair to the American public, as the resource is not being properly protected for future use. Consideration of a fee scale that more appropriately reflects current market rate, that perhaps has a built in scale that can reward those properly utilizing public resource, would be appropriate.

We implore you to recognize this crucial juncture in the Wild Horse and Burro Program. A failure to define clearly a viability of use standard for this mandated legal user, of a small portion of public land, has created a crisis. The Crisis not only exists in over burdened holding facilities but on the range itself. At no time have these populations been managed as “wild and integral” as intended by Congress.

Before any more removals occur on public land a true viability standard must be created. Faulty boundary lines must be evaluated. Genetic viability to each herd must be understood and protected in a manner reflective of a wild population (a population able to reproduce itself, even with a stochastic event) must be defined as outlined by law. The resources required to sustain those populations must be protected prior to other uses being permitted.

The wild horses and burros, under law, have nowhere else to go. They must be protected within the boundaries that have been established until those boundaries are re-evaluated and corrected.

Other uses have considerable public resource to draw upon.

Attached is a site-specific report on an HMA in the Battle Mountain District/Elko/Ely  (Diamond). It clearly demonstrates that many areas have, and are, being over utilized by private interests creating artificial impact on a population of wild horses that are (under law) to be managed as wild and integral.

We urge you to support the proactive actions currently transpiring in the Battle Mountain District. We implore you to urge the District to continue to create proactive plans toward creating an actual equity of utilization and protection of public resource. True “multiple use” does not operate in derogation of other uses or users. It strives to understand the complexity of interaction that begins with complete and accurate conversation.

Sincerely,

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