Wild Horse Observers Association (WHOA)
PO Box 932
Placitas, NM87043
(505) 867-5228
SB861
Wild Horse Management and Tourism Programs
3/14/05
Clarification
This bill SB861, does not apply to any federal lands.
This bill SB861 applies to New Mexico State Lands only.
The 1971 Free Roaming Wild Horse and Burro Act appliesonly to federal lands
Bay Frame Overo Paint / Bay Tobiano PaintExcerpt from Variety of Colors
Text by Dr. Phillip Sponenberg, DMV, Ph.D.
From "North American Colonial Spanish Horse—History & Type
"The frame overo pattern is especially interesting, since it is almost limited to North American Colonial Spanish horses or their descendants.
ATTACHMENT INDEX
Page
Attachment 1 7
WILD HORSES TOURISM
Attachment 2 13
Attorney General Statement Patricia Madrid
Attachment 3 16
Attorney General Opinion Tom Udall, Opinion 94-06
Attachment 3 25
Children of Santo DomingoElementary School-
Support the Placitas Wild HorsesLetters with Pictures
and Signatures
Attachment 4 30
Junior Optimist Club of Placitas -
Support Wild Horses with Letters with Pictures and Signatures
Attachment 5 31
SENATE BILL 861
CONSERVATION COMMITTEE with edits 33
JUDICIARY COMMITTEE with edits 34
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T 35
SB861
Wild Horse Management and Tourism Programs
3/14/05
- Tourism and Local Pride. Conquistadors are extinct in Spain and there are only a few left here. These are exciting historical living treasures and are an asset of this state.
- Tourism; Become leaders in horse tourism and utilize the local customs to develop Wild Horse Festivals staggered in time across the state, all ending at the State Fair.See Attachment 1.
- Encourage cultural pride in the youth of New Mexicans
- Utilize the preserves and many horse rescues NM has while encouraging further private entities to open other preserves.
- NM Livestock Board gathers 25 unclaimed horses per yearfrom all categories of lands (2001, 2002)See Exhibit 1.
- Some of these are branded.
- Some fit the definition of a wild horse in SB861.
- Some fit the definition of Conquistador in SB861.
- The “estrays” gathered by the NM Livestock Board are sold at auction where most go for slaughter, somein Mexico.See Exhibit 2.There is no way to avoid this under the current system except for the occasional sealed bids where the price is raised from $105 per Mother and Baby pair to from $160 to $620 per individual horse.
- Two New Mexico Attorney General’s have recommended thatNew Mexicohas the right to define wild horse in the statutes, as well asrecommending what protections they should receive.
See Attachment 2.
- Discrepancies have occurred in determination of estray horses due to the lack of a New MexicoStatedefinition of a wild horse. This has resulted in a loss of Conquistador horses and other wild horses of New Mexico. See Exhibit 3
- Local support including the founding of WHOA for our states wild horses.
a.Over 800 citizen’s attempt to protect Placitaswild horses.See Exhibit 4
b.Homeowners Association letter of Support See Exhibit 5
c.176 Native American children’swritten requests with colored drawings to save New Mexico’s wild horses. See Attachment 3.
d.24 Placitas children’s written requests with colored drawings to save New Mexico’s wild horses. See Attachment 4.
e.13 Affidavits See Exhibit 6
EXHIBIT SUMMARIES
(EXHIBITS To be supplied in committee)
EXHIBIT 1
NM Livestock Board FOIA Data on NM Estrays
2001 24 horses total
2 branded
Disposition
- 23 horses sold at auction
- 1 horse sold by sealed Bid
2002 27 horses total
6 branded
Disposition
- 25 sold horses at auction
- 2 disposition undisclosed
EXHIBIT 2
NM Livestock Board FOIA Data on NM Estrays
Horses garner higher price outside auction. 2002 data
EXHIBIT 3
NM Livestock Board Inspectors Report
Santo Domingo and San Felipe tribes contacted by Livestock Board Inspector to determine ownership of Placitas Estrays.
Tribe spokespersons say
“The Horses were not property of the tribe“
Inspector then calls BLM. BLM states without proof or without seeing the horses that they do belong are the “reservations”
The Livestock Board Inspector takes the BLM’s word although the BLM states that they are not unhappy about the horses being caught.
Letter from the current Assisitant Attorney General Elizabeth A. Glenn 12/15/2003.
Shows that the Livestock Board claimed the San Felipe Tribe had claimed the horses during a meeting with the Livestock Board on Dec 4, 2003.
- FOIA response from Livestock Board to June 22ed 2004..
- No such proof exists.
- Telecon of 3/19/04 with Ted Garcia of the San Felipe Governors office stating;
- “They had not yet made a determination”
EXHIBIT 4
Over 800 Placitas and Alb Signatures in favor of the Wild Horses
EXHIBIT 5
La Mesa Subdivision of Placitas Letter of support to keep wild horses in Placitas
EXHIBIT 6
13 Affidavits showing that the Placitas horses which travel both New Mexico Open Space and BLM lands are wild horses. These affidavits also show the BLM and Livestock Board are incorrect with regards to the Native Americans ownership of the Horses in Placitas.
Attachment 1
Wild Horse Observers Association
New Mexico The HorseFriendlyState
3/18/04
WILD HORSES TOURISM
Introduction
The State of New Mexico has a natural and cultural resource that should be used to meet Governor Richardson’s goal of increased tourism and revenue for the State.
A partnership between the State government, the Forest Service, and the BLM, in which the State’s remaining wild horses are protected, managed, and promoted as a national legacy could result in increased tourism in and around the WildHorseTerritories of New Mexico.
Such is the case in Chincoteague, VA, where the wild horse population of Assateague Island is maintained below 150 animals originally by the annual pony swim and adoption, and birth control in the last 12 yrs. This event has grown from 15 colts sold in 1925 to the present day average of 85 ponies sold and an attendance that has continued to grow from 25,000 in 1937 (see attachment IV on pony penning). Countless other tourist-based businesses have been built on the legend of the Chincoteague ponies.
Wild horses can successfully draw tourists, especially when promoted in a state abounding with natural beauty that seems to change with every bend in the road and the added attraction of the Hispanic, Native American, and cowboy cultures.
FOREST SERVICE TOURISM
First Step
Advertise our NationalHorseTerritories at the New MexicoTouristCenters and their kiosks. Also advertise wild horse-based New Mexican businesses at those locations.
Opportunities
Historical Classes/Videos/Books/Lectures on the history of the Spanish horse in New Mexico could be shown/made available at the Ranger Stations. Other subjects include:
- Wild horse training,
- Round-ups,
- Spanish Conquistadors,
- Biology,
- Ecological balance,
- Birth control in wild horse management,
- Evolution,
- Cultural value/significance,
- Role of horse in NM and US history, etc.
- Hispanic heritage,
- Native American heritage,
- Wildlife photography of wild horses in their open range,
- Eco-Tourism and information,
- 1971 Wild Horse and Burro Act Education
Eco Tours given by the FS. Few states currently offer ecotourism and ecotours! Make NM unique for promoting our Wild Horses as income generators while we preserve our national heritage.
Sales of WildHorseTerritory maps, wild horse souvenirs (hat pins, magnets, Christmas ornaments, post cards, note cards, posters, booklets, stuffed animals, etc.)
Camping/Horseback riding.
Careers in Wild Horse Management
LOCAL TOURISM
Opportunities to promote
- Involve the locals near the WildHorseTerritories and the Wild Horse Businesses in the state on how they would like to be advertised nationally at our tourist centers and how to maximize tourism potential.
- Annual Wild Horse Parades and Hispanic and Native American festivals in towns adjacent to current Wild horse territories, preserves, sites etc, all coordinated to overlap so visitors can go from town to town. Towns/areas include include:
(Also See Attachments I, II,II)
Mt.Taylor
Placitas
El Rito
Santa Fe
Socorro (BLM herd)
Jicarilla
Cedar Crest
- Find out what the local Hispanic and Native American traditions were and are for celebrating their heritage in relationship to the horse. Use these.
- Horseback Rides/Camping with the Ranchers.
- State Fair (Feature the Annual National Spanish Registry Shows/Meetings/Event.)
- Bed n Breakfasts advertised near these sites.
- Local training demonstrations.
- Local Artists Paintings of Wild Horses.
- Local stores with wild horse figurines/books etc.
- Real estate ads in the adjacent towns should add wild horse viewing opportunities around the state.
- Endurance rides from town to town during the time staggard wild horse festivals all ending at the time of the state fair.
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION
Six National Registries exist for Wild Horses
- Horse of the Americas (is a unified registry for lovers of America's First True Horses) Barb, Spanish Mustang, Original Native American Horse, Colonial Spanish or Cayuse.) National Horse Registry
Wild Horse Breeders/Conservators/Businesses in New Mexico
(Not a complete list)
- Dan Elkins
- Steve and Janie Dobrott
Ladder Ranch
HC 31, Box 95
Caballo, NM87931-9702
(505) 895-5381 - Jeff and Helena Hammer
P. O. Box 829
Tyrone, NM88065-0829
(505) 388-1270
e-mail: - Emmett Brislawn
Cayuse Ranch
2740 D Road, Oshoto, WY 82721
Telephone/Fax: 307 467-5394 Or email
Riding/Camping
- Current Movie Hidalgo is about a Spanish Mustang
List of Books on training. Long but not complete!
List of Videos. Long but not complete!
SUMMARY
The wild horses of New Mexico are a national treasure and an underutilized resource. Benefits of promoting wild-horse related tourism include:
- Additional revenue for the State and business communities around WildHorseTerritories
- Another horse attraction that could gain National Attention such as the Arabian Nationals which we are losing to Oklahoma
- Improved public perception of the Forest Service and BLM as caring and efficient stewards of public lands and wildlife
- Tourism dollars could help pay for herd maintenance in some areas
- More public attention on New Mexico’s wild horses would likely improve BLM wild horse and burro status.
Attachment I
Forest Service (FS) Inventory.
The following is a listing of the Wild Free-Roaming Horse and BurroTerritories in Region 3:
WildHorseTerritory NameForest
HeberApache/Sitgreaves (01)
JicarillaCarson (02)
Mesa Las ViejasCarson (02)
Mesa MontosaCarson (02)
Jarita MesaCarson (02)
Deep CreekGila (06)
San DiegoSanta Fe (10)
Caja del RioSanta Fe (10)
ChicomaSanta Fe (10)
WildBurroTerritory NameForest
Double AKaibab (07)
Dome (Bandelier)Santa Fe (10)
SaguaroTonto (12)
Attachment II
The current FS total Target No. for the horses in NM 218.
Area / Forest / Cattle Head Months* / No. Cattle / No. Horses / Forest AcresJarita Mesa / Carson / 2,362 / 429 / 80 / 63,673
Jicarilla / Carson / 992 / 180 / 200 / 75,987
Montosa / Carson / 5,310 / 965 / 44,940
Caja / Santa fe / 8,297 / 1,509 / 48 / 14,380
Heber / Apache Sitgreaves / 16,554 / 3,010 / 176,710
Mesa Las Viejas / Carson/ Santa Fe / 14,205 / 2,583 / 67,767
Deep Creek / Gila / 3,372 / 613 / 27,724
San Diego / Santa Fe / 5,765 / 1,048 / 75,114
Chicoma / Santa Fe / 9,312 / 1,693 / 13 / 74,539
Total / 66,169 / 12,031 / 341 / 620,834
*(Cattle x 165 days)/30 = Head Months, therefore Cattle = Head Months/5.5
Attachment III
BLM Inventory Soccoro = 70 Wild horses
Total Wild Horses on Federal land in NM (411)
- The total federally recognized and protected wild horse population on both Forest Service Lands and BLM multiple use lands is 411 in NM with a total target of 288.
CONTACT US:
Wild Horse Observers Assoc. (WHOA)
PO Box 932Placitas, NM87034
Ph/fax (505) 867-5228
A 501C3
Attachment 2
Attachment 3
Children of Santo Domingo Elementary
School-
Support the Placitas Wild Horses
The children of the Santo DomingoElementary School got together with pencil, crayon, and paper to send letters of support for the Wild Horses of Placitas. See all their wonderful drawings below.
We encourage all parents to discuss with their children the importance of the well-being of all creatures on this earth.Click here to get a blank copy of the letter, so that your children can also participate.
Click on the thumbnail picture to see the drawing at full size
May 7th, 2003
Dear NM / US Congressmen, BLM, NM Livestock Board, and,
NM Attorney General Patricia Madrid
Don’t let this be the last wild horse/s seen!!!!
Many of the Placitas Wild horses and others have been rounded up as “Livestock” and sold at auction to a sad fate. There are few left. Please put this picture on your wall.
I am asking you to consider what horses have done for this country. They are part of our Local and National Heritage. The wild horses belong to us all. Please support the following actions.
- Wild Horses should be designated as Wild Horses not Estray or Livestock.
- Support the Anti-Horse for meat Bill (H.R. 857). Americans do not eat horses.
- No More Spring Round-ups on federal lands. This hurts babies.
- All horses should be designated as companion animals, not Livestock.
- Horses should not be exempt from the New Mexico Animal Cruelty Law.
- Make the 10 Wild Horse Territories in NM (1 BLM, 9 National Forests (NF’s)) REAL sanctuaries, use them for horses, only 3 NF’s have any horses, quit Spring round-ups, and allow at least as many horses as cattle. Quit allowing these sanctuaries to evade being used as actual horse sanctuaries. 218 horses allowed total versus thousands of cattle in our WildHorseTerritories.
- Support Win-Win alternatives for ranchers like federal buy-outs, No imports of South American beef, and let them be Alternative energy farmers instead if they desire.
Sincerely,
Junior Optimists Club
Attachment 4
Junior Optimist Club of Placitas -
Takes Action in Support of Their Wild Horses
The children of the Junior Optimist Club of Placitas, New Mexico got together with pencil, crayon, and paper to send letters of support for the Wild Horses of Placitas. See all their wonderful drawings below.
We encourage all parents to discuss with their children the importance of the well-being of all creatures on this earth.Click here to get a blank copy of the letter, so that your children can also participate.
Click on the thumbnail picture to see the drawing at full size
Attachment 5
SENATE BILL 861
47th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2005
INTRODUCED BY
Steve Komadina
AN ACT
RELATING TO ANIMALS; REQUIRING DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID TESTING WHEN WILD HORSES ARE CAPTURED; REQUIRING CONQUISTADOR HORSES TO BE RELOCATED TO HORSE PRESERVES; PROHIBITING THE SLAUGHTER OF WILD HORSES; ALLOWING EUTHANASIA; ALLOWING FOR ADOPTION; PROVIDING FOR THE CONTROL OF WILD HORSE POPULATIONS BY MEANS OF BIRTH CONTROL.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. WILD HORSES--DNA TESTING--CONQUISTADOR HORSES--SLAUGHTERING PROHIBITED--BIRTH CONTROL.--
A. As used in this section:
(1) "conquistador horse" means a wild horse that is descended from horses of the Spanish conquistadores;
(2) "public land" does not include federal land controlled by the bureau of land management or the forest service;
(3) "range" means the amount of land necessary to sustain a herd of wild horses, which does not exceed its known territorial limits; and
(4) "wild horse" means an unbranded and unclaimed horse on public land.
B. A wild horse that is captured shall have its deoxyribonucleic acid tested to determine if it is a conquistador horse. If it is a conquistador horse, the wild horse shall be relocated to a state or private wild horse preserve created and maintained for the purpose of protecting conquistador horses. If it is not a conquistador horse, it shall be returned to the public land, relocated to a public or private wild horse preserve or put up for adoption by the agency on whose land the wild horse was captured.
C. If the mammal division of the museum of southwestern biology at the university of New Mexico determines that a wild horse herd exceeds the number of horses that is necessary for preserving the genetic stock of the herd and for preserving and maintaining the range, it may cause control of the wild horse population through the use of birth control and may cause excess horses to be:
(1) humanely captured and relocated to other public land or to a public or private wild horse preserve;
(2) adopted by a qualified person for private maintenance; or
(3) euthanized; provided that this option applies only to wild horses that are determined by a veterinarian to be crippled or otherwise unhealthy.
D. It is unlawful for a person in New Mexico to slaughter a wild horse. It is unlawful for a person in New Mexico to possess or sell a wild horse for slaughter. A person who violates the provisions of this subsection is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by imprisonment for a definite term of less than one year or the payment of a fine of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or both such imprisonment and fine.
- 3 -
FORTY-SEVENTH LEGISLATURESB 861/a
FIRST SESSION, 2005
February 15, 2005
Madam President:
Your CONSERVATION COMMITTEE, to whom has been referred
SENATE BILL 861
has had it under consideration and reports same WITHOUT RECOMMENDATION, amended as follows:
1. On page 2, line 1, after "service" insert "or state trust land controlled by the state land office".,
and thence referred to the JUDICIARY COMMITTEE.
Respectfully submitted,
______
Carlos R. Cisneros, Chairman
Adopted______Not Adopted______
(Chief Clerk) (Chief Clerk)
Date ______
The roll call vote was 7 For 1 Against
Yes: 7
No: Harden
Excused: Martinez
Absent: None
SB0861CO1.156419.1
FORTY-SEVENTH LEGISLATURESB 861/a
FIRST SESSION, 2005
March 4, 2005
Madam President:
Your JUDICIARY COMMITTEE, to whom has been referred
SENATE BILL 861, as amended
has had it under consideration and reports same with recommendation that it DO PASS, amended as follows:
1. On page 1, line 13, after the semicolon strike the remainder of the line and strike line 14 through the first semicolon.
2. On page 1, line 20, strike "--SLAUGHTERING PROHIBITED".