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Jack,
This week’s edition of e-news is packed with exciting updates, concerning developments, and insightful perspectives on our mission to protect America's wild horses and burros.
Good News: AWHC Renews Cooperative Agreement to Continue Groundbreaking Humane Mgt Program [[link removed]]
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Last month, AWHC and the Nevada Department of Agriculture signed a non-exclusive agreement to implement a humane fertility control program for the Virginia Range free-roaming horse population for the sixth year in a row. This program is the world’s largest of its kind and was the basis of a recent, peer-reviewed scientific study, affirming the viability of large-scale fertility control programs. Read the announcement. [[link removed]]
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AWHC in the News: New report finds success in wild horse adoption program, critics disagree [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]The Reno Gazette Journal recently interviewed AWHC team member, Amelia Perrin, about a new report that endorses the Bureau of Land Management’s Adoption Incentive Program. AWHC blasted the report and its recommendation to increase the cash incentives that are sending droves of wild horses into the slaughter pipeline, stating it was just an “endorsement of the expansion of a fundamentally broken management system.” Read the article for more. [[link removed]]
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Opinion: Wild horse roundups are cruel and deadly. And the deaths don't stop when helicopters land [[link removed]]
americanwildhorse.org/media/opinion-wild-horse-roundups-are-cruel-and-deadly-and-deaths-dont-stop-when-helicopters-land [americanwildhorse.org/media/opinion-wild-horse-roundups-are-cruel-and-deadly-and-deaths-dont-stop-when-helicopters-land]In a recent opinion piece, published in Reno, AWHC’s Nevada state director, Tracy Wilson, criticizes the Bureau of Land Management's wild horse roundups as cruel and deadly. The article emphasizes the high mortality rates at holding facilities, such as the Fallon Off-Range Corral, where nearly 9% of horses died within a year, and offers humane solutions that would keep wild horses in the wild, where they belong. Read the full piece. [[link removed]]
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American Wild Horse Conservation
P.O. Box 1733
Davis, CA 95617
United States