Guest commentary: No water, no life: Death of a wild horse mother and her baby highlights urgent need for reform | News, Sports, Jobs

Guest commentary: No water, no life: Death of a wild horse mother and her baby highlights urgent need for reform | News, Sports, Jobs





Guest commentary: No water, no life: Death of a wild horse mother and her baby highlights urgent need for reform | News, Sports, Jobs

Courtesy of Wild Beauty Foundation

This undated photo shows a mare and her foal trapped in the mud at Muddy Creek Herd Management Area in Utah.

Imagine your legs paralyzed by mud, your baby crying beside you as you sweat out what little water you have left in your body, searching for food in a home that has become a death trap.

A mare and her foal died this month of severe dehydration, victims of a war on wilderness funded by taxpayer dollars. Their bodies fell just feet from the Horse Valley Wilderness sign. In excruciating pain, they waited desperately for water denied to them by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The mare and her foal could not roam and search for another water source, not only because the landscape was divided by fences, but also because their weakened legs were submerged in mud. In their final moments, mother and baby sought comfort from each other. Instead of giving the tormented mare water, the BLM eventually administered a bullet to end the pain that had lasted her entire life. After waiting for hours in the dried-up pond, the foal was finally brought to the Axtell sanctuary overnight. Unable to be resuscitated, it too was euthanized.

The agency’s callous response is emblematic of a much deeper, systemic dysfunction caused by the competing interests of ranching companies. While the agency limits the number of wild horses in the Muddy Creek Herd Management Area to 75-125, it allows 2,853 private cattle to graze in the same region. In Utah alone, the BLM’s appropriate management rate is 1,956 horses, while by contrast, for the same land, the BLM issues 1.3 million monthly animal unit permits, which equates to as many as 2.6 million individual cattle. Cattle not only impact the land through their sheer abundance and grazing habits, but also exacerbate natural drought, contributing disproportionately to the climate crisis and reducing the land’s ecological harmony to dust. The 2021 drought monitor report PEER, published by the Bureau of Land Management, documents the Muddy Creek Herd Management Area as a parcel where “current grazing management or level of use for livestock on public lands is, or is likely to be, a significant causal factor in failure to meet land health standards.” Despite these conditions, the BLM refuses to provide emergency water to the horses, arguing that providing water “is detrimental to herds.”

While activists who try to give water to dying animals face harassment and even arrests by BLM officials, the agency cannot be prosecuted for its own violations of its core laws. Although the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act is designed to permanently protect horses from “capture, branding, harassment, or death,” it lacks a key component: the right of the public to challenge the law in court. Unlike the Endangered Species Act, for example, the law does not include a provision allowing citizens to sue. This means that to prosecute abuse of authority, lawyers often have to prove that the BLM’s actions violated another federal law, not the law itself. And so the BLM continues to blame wild horses for their own deaths.

What happened under the scorching sun of Muddy Creek is not an accident. It is not an unfortunate anomaly. It is the loss of life, freedom and wild beauty in the stranglehold of an agency that has repeatedly put the ranching industry ahead of its federal responsibility to ensure the survival of free-born horses.

Photo courtesy

If you believe our country needs to rise above such cruelty, call your members of Congress today and tell them that BLM’s policies do not align with the willful ignorance that took the lives of a mare and her foal. Demand that the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act be amended to include a citizen’s suit clause so that we the people can denounce the lack of enforcement. Share their story so we can drive change before the next horses fall victim to systematic inaction. By failing to challenge the current paradigm, we are bearing the future consequences of this agency’s negligence with us.

Josselyn Wolf is a 16-year-old artist, activist, and youth ambassador for the Wild Beauty Foundation. She is passionate about storytelling, especially stories that expose injustice and inspire people to work toward a more compassionate and sustainable world. For more information on the Muddy Creek tragedy, visit: https://wildbeautyfoundation.org/wild-horse-family-dies-at-muddy-creek-while-blm-does-nothing/



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