Wild Horses: National Wild Horse and Burro Protest Day March 1
February 28, 2012Wild Horses: Mustang Awareness Day at Medicine Horse in Boulder, CO on 4/28
April 6, 2012BLM Seeks Contracts to Remove Wild Horses from Public Lands, and Replace with Cattle
Unedited Press Release from the Bureau of Land Management
Release Date: 03/28/12
Contacts: Heather Emmons , 775-861-6594
BLM Seeks Bids for New Type of Contracts for Wild Horse and Burro Management
As part of its responsibility to manage and protect wild horses and burros, the Bureau of Land Management, in collaboration with the USDA Forest Service (FS), is soliciting bids for several contracts that will help manage wild horses and burros located across the western United States. The contracts are for a new bait trapping method that is intended to relieve areas of excess wild horses and burros where helicopter drive trapping is not an effective method. The bids are the first of their kind, in that they involve six zones across the West, with a potential for multiple contractors simultaneously bait trapping animals over an extended period of time.
Bait trapping is not a new method of gathering animals for the BLM; it has been implemented in areas where timeliness is not an issue, as bait trapping usually occurs over several weeks or months, and in locations where BLM personnel can easily monitor the progress from their duty locations. Many times it occurs in areas where water is already scarce and the animals are lured by the water provided, or in areas where a helicopter cannot easily move the animals out of densely wooded areas. Bait trapping involves capturing wild horses and burros by setting up panels and using food, water, salt or sexual attraction (a mare in heat) to lure animals into a trap. Allowing contractors to execute the bait trapping over lengthy amounts of time in a variety of locations simultaneously, however, is a new strategy for the BLM’s Wild Horse and Burro Program.
“The BLM is committed to continuously improving its management of wild horses and burros,” said BLM Wild Horse and Burro Division Chief Joan Guilfoyle. “Deploying this new method of bait trapping enhances our ability to gather animals more effectively in certain areas of the West, while minimizing the impact to the animals.”
The concept of the contract is not to capture large numbers of wild horses and burros in a short period of time, but rather to capture smaller numbers over a long period of time. A benefit is that it reduces the impact to the BLM’s holding facilities—instead of large horse gathers with hundreds or thousands of animals entering the facilities at one time, this type of management involves very small amounts of animals trickling into facilities over a longer period of time. Each contract is from July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2013, with an option for four additional one-year periods.
The work consists of the capture, care and transportation of wild horses and /or burros from Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming. It requires work to be accomplished in a safe and humane manner during all phases of the operation, including capture, handling and transport. The contract is not set up for holding wild horses and burros for any length of time, but to have the wild horses and burros shipped to BLM facilities as soon as possible. The contracts involve setting up a trap, capturing wild horses and burros and shipping them to the BLM preparation facilities. The capture, care and handling must be completed by those who are knowledgeable and experienced about the behavior and trapping of equines.
The zones are determined by the location of FS territories, BLM herd management areas and proximity to BLM preparation facilities. The goal is to employ contractors who live around the area where the wild horses and burros are located, so that they have short travel times from one trap area to another or to the BLM facility. There can be more than one contract per zone and one contractor can bid on more than one zone.
The BLM’s bidding requirements are posted in solicitation L12PS00229, the details of which are available at http://www.fedconnect.net. To obtain the solicitation: (1) click on “Search Public Opportunities”; (2) under Search Criteria, select “Reference Number”; (3) put in the solicitation number (L12PS00229); and (4) click “Search” and the solicitation information will appear. The solicitation form describes what to submit and where to send it. Applicants must be registered at http://www.ccr.gov to be considered for a contract award.
The BLM and FS manage wild horses and burros as part of their overall multiple-use missions. Under the authority of the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, the BLM and FS manage and protect these living symbols of the Western spirit while ensuring that population levels are in balance with other public rangeland resources and uses.
To make sure that healthy herds thrive on healthy rangelands, the BLM must remove thousands of animals from the range each year to control the size of herds, which have virtually no predators and can double in population every four years. The current free-roaming population of BLM-managed wild horses and burros is 38,500, which exceeds by nearly 12,000 the number determined by the BLM to be the appropriate management level. Off the range, there are more than 47,000 wild horses and burros cared for in either short-term corrals or long-term pastures. All these animals, whether on or off the range, are protected by the BLM under the 1971 law.
For a map of proposed bait-trap zones, visit http://on.doi.gov/GYyFqZ
3 Comments
I’ve been to bait and trap operations in New Mexico. Ted Turner uses this method routinely. It is not as hard on the horses as heli round ups but seeing them captured and trucked away from their free roam life, still broke my heart. Such a betrayal. “If” there really wasn’t enough land and resources for the wild horses, then this method could be a more humane measure. But – alas all of “us” know it’s not about enough resources being available for the horses, it comes down to a matter of biases and the deep pockets who want land and it’s glory for their own interests. What i also going on at the small holding facilities where the bait trapped horses came in, was that they slipped away, to buyers unknown. Many were not branded and just disappeared.
The purpose of the 71 law was to take the wild horses out of the ranchers hands-while I am for bait trapping..the BLM awarded the contract to the rancher who owns the cattle allotments..effectively putting the wild horses back in the hands of ranchers..since they are getting paid to do it..perhaps they will shown more concern..but don’t expect to have any wild horses left on the land..its a win-win-win for the ranchers
Why this is happening I have no idea. The head count is in question as to how many are really there. I’m wondering if 100 years ago there was 2 million horses and 10 million buffalo on this same land,why wasn’t the land all destroyed then? I understand there is less land available now,but there is still plenty to just leave them alone and save our tax dollars. I have other things I need my tax money spent on like roads,jobs,better place to live. I am disabled and can’t get money for a home or to buy a vehicle or even food and you are wasting money on an unneeded removal of horses. How about this….ask the American public where they want the horses to be. Bet it won’t be in a holding pen. I applaud Madeline Pickens for all she is doing. Give them to her and let her put them on the thousands of acres she has bought for them.