7 legal points for wild horses and burros

Truck in the pens (© Anne Novak, All rights reserved)

Truck in the pens (© Anne Novak, All rights reserved)

by Kathleen Hayden

1. Wild horses and burros are no less “wild” animals than are the grizzly bears that roam our national parks and forests (Mountain States v. Hodel) neither the states of the federal government have the right to harm Our Heritage Wildlife as found by the 1995 Supreme court Ruling Babbit v.Sweet Home.

2. The Babbit v Sweet Home case found that the term “take” means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct. 16 U.S.C. § 1532(19)

3. By a 6-3 vote, the Court upheld the statutory authority of the Secretary of the Interior to include “habitat modification and degradation” as conduct which constitutes “harm” under the ESA.
In addition to the statutory provisions described above,

4. Section 5 of the ESA authorizes the Secretary to purchase the lands on which the survival of the species depends. Accordingly, Sweet Home maintained that this Section 5 authority was “the Secretary’s only means of forestalling that grave result [i.e. possible extinction)

5. As a result, based upon “the text, structure, and legislative history of the ESA the Supreme Court concluded that “the Secretary reasonably construed the intent of Congress when he defined ‘harm’ to include ‘significant habitat modification or degradation that actually kills or injures wildlife species.

6. Pursuant to BLM’s 2001 Special Status Species Policy requirement that “sensitive” species be afforded, at a minimum, the same protections as candidate species for listing under the ESA. It called on BLM managers to “obtain and use the best available information deemed necessary to evaluate the status of special status species in areas affected by land use plans . . . .

7. See Policy at § 6840.22A. Under the Policy, those land use plans “shall be sufficiently detailed to identify and resolve significant land use conflicts with special status species without deferring conflict resolution to implementation-level planning.” Id. (Case 4:08-cv-00516-BLW Document 131 Filed 09/28/11 Page 8 of 37 (Sagegrouse decision)

Reasons why the Massacre Lake Roundup should be stopped

——– Original Message ——–

Subject: Massacre Lake EA. please include attachment with submitted comment

From: “Kathleen Hayden”

Date: Fri, September 27, 2013 9:43 pm

To: <casrpubcom@blm.gov>

 

September 27, 2013

Bureau of Land Management

PO Box 460

Cedarville, CA 96104

casrpubcom@blm.gov

 

Re Massacre Lake EA.

Dear Mr. Burke:

As BLM has prepared the  EA  to consider the environmental impacts of resulting from grazing livestock and wild horses at various levels.  I submit to you the following  as the basis for my comments.  Also I emphatically question the  allegation that wild horses contribute to the degradation of habitat if given access to their migratory and native ranges on this landscape.

1. livestock grazing impacts must be mitigated by retiring the allotment.

2. inventories of  free roaming wild horses must be maintained at genetic violable levels  as a special status species and/ or distinct population segment,  and candidate for ESA listing based on loss of habitat.

3.  Wild horse herds are eligible for inclusion  on  ACEC and Multiple Species Habitat plans.

4. BLM is required to consult  with the counties  and comply with local  RMP policies regarding cultural historic preservation, and  ESA mandates.

5. Compliance with National Preservation Act Sec 106..please include  attachment into these submitted comments.

Per case law the BLM’s powers to maintain and control the population of wild horses is severely restricted.  As Federal Judge Rosemary M. Conyers stated in her ruling against the BLM in the Colorado Wild Horse and Burro Coalition case“BLM’s authority to “manage” wild free-roaming horses and burros is expressly made subject to “the provisions of this chapter[,]” 16 U.S.C. § 1333(a), including the provision that “[i]t is the policy of Congress that wild free-roaming horses and burros shall be protected from capture . . . .” Id. § 1331. It would be anomalous to infer that by authorizing the custodian of the wild free roaming horses and burros to “manage” them, Congress intended to permit the animals’ custodian to subvert the primary policy of the statute by capturing and removing from the wild the very animals that Congress sought to protect from being captured and removed from the wild.”

Wild horses are native wildlife by fossil evidence, by Congressional designation, Heritage Preservation cultural landscape laws, and case law. They meet the criteria as rare, threatened and endangered for  protection from extinction.

Mountain States v. Hodel  Wild  findings determined that  horses and burros are no less “wild” animals than are the grizzly bears that roam our national parks and forests

and BLM states ” The issue of a wild horse as an invasive species is moot since the 1971 WHBA gave wild free-roaming horses “special” status based on their heritage of assisting man settle the “west”
.”

A sensitive” species pursuant to BLM’s 2001 Special Status Species Policy requires that “sensitive”species be afforded, at a minimum, the same protections as a candidate species  for listing under the ESA.  This was  a confirmed finding in the sagegrouse decision.

Finding of fact from Mountain States v. Hodel In structure and purpose, the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act is nothing more than a land-use regulation enacted by Congress to ensure the survival of a particular species of wildlife.

The overabundance of  livestock  on these checkerboard lands  diminish the natural ecological balance.  For-profit livestock  outnumber wild horses and burros approximately 150 to 1 on land that by law must comply with ESA mandates to ensure the continuity of  wildlife species, also protected under the Doctrine of public trust.,

The BLM manual, section 6840 (Special Status Species Management), provides overall policy direction to BLM managers to conserve listed threatened or endangered species on BLM administered lands, and to ensure  that actions authorized on BLM administered lands do not contribute to the need to list federal candidate, state‑listed or BLM sensitive species.   USFWS also shares the  responsibility for  consultation under the for- mentioned  mandates on RMP properties.

(§ 1610.7-2 )  Areas having potential for Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC)

Areas having potential for Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) designation and protection shall be identified and considered throughout the resource management planning process (see §§1610.4–1 through 1610.4–9).

(a) The inventory data shall be analyzed to determine whether there are areas containing resources, values,  eligible for further consideration for designation as an ACEC.  In order to be a potential ACEC, both of the following criteria shall be met:

(1) Relevance. There shall be present a significant historic, cultural, scenic value or wildlife resource

(2) Importance. The above described value, resource, system, process, shall have substantial significance and values. This generally requires qualities of more than local significance and special worth, consequence, meaning, distinctiveness, or cause for concern.

(b) The approval of a resource management plan, plan revision, or plan amendment constitutes formal designation of any ACEC involved.  The approved plan shall include the general management practices and uses, including mitigating measures, identified to protect designated ACEC.

Proper enforcement of the law would support an  RMP amendment while drastically reducing the budgets of both federal agencies charged with implementing the protection of wild horses and /or burros.   Compliance with well established case laws  requiring  conservation/preservation/inventory,  and maintenance   would provide sufficient habitat critical to sustain the continuity of our heritage wild horse and burro herds as Congress  intended.

Last but not least I would like to bring to your attention to the similarities of purpose between and ACEC and Herd Area to provide sufficient migratory ranges for a rare, threatened and endangered wildlife species.

 

Yours very Truly,

Kathleen Hayden

 

Wild Horses & Burros and the law

Photo ©Rachel Anne Reeves all rights reserved

Photo ©Rachel Anne Reeves all rights reserved

Kathleen Hayden’s list

1. The 1971 Wild horse Act is superseded by the Wildlife Trust laws whose basis was the Magna Carta which can be seen in the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights.

2. Changes in English common law enacted in 1641, ruled that the Magna Carta had settled the question of who owns fish and wildlife.

3. Wild horses and burros are no less “wild” animals than are the grizzly bears that roam our national parks and forests (Mountain States v. Hodel)neither the states of the federal government have the right to harm Our Heritage  Wildlife as found by Supreme court 1995 Ruling Babbit v.Sweet Home.

4. The Babbit v Sweet Home case found that The term “take” means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct. 16 U.S.C. § 1532(19).

5.  By a 6-3 vote, the Court upheld the statutory authority of the Secretary of the Interior to include “habitat modification and degradation” as conduct which constitutes “harm” under the ESA.

In addition to the statutory provisions described above,

6. Section 5 of the ESA authorizes the Secretary to purchase the lands on which the survival of the species depends. Accordingly, Sweet Home maintained that this Section 5 authority was “the Secretary’s only means of forestalling that grave result [i.e. possible extinction).

7.  As a result, based upon “the text, structure, and legislative history of the ESA the Supreme Court concluded that “the Secretary reasonably construed the intent of Congress when he defined ‘harm’ to include ‘significant habitat modification or degradation that actually kills or injures wildlife species.

8.  Pursuant to BLM’s 2001 Special Status Species Policy requirement that “sensitive” species be afforded, at a minimum, the same protections as candidate species for listing under the ESA. It called on BLM managers to “obtain and use the best available information deemed necessary to evaluate the status of special status species in areas affected by land use plans . . . This statement by BLM was from the May 2003 Proposed Nevada Test and Training Range Resource Management Plan and Final EIS    Comment 87, BLM Response, pg. E-25″The issue of a wild horse as an invasive species is moot since the 1971 WHBA gave wild free-roaming horses “special” status based on their heritage of assisting man settle the “West”.