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Effort
To
Rescue
Horses
Strains
Sanctuaries
Lack
of
funds,
too many
animals
leave
some
groups
struggling
to help
By
LISA
SANDBERG
Copyright
2007
Houston
Chronicle
Austin
Bureau
Oct.
20,
2007,
10:13PM
Rescuing
horses
Habitat
for
Horses
caters
to
guests
of
varied
temperament:
sweet
horses,
mean
horses,
mellow
horses.
The
Hitchcock
organization
that
takes in
— and
dotes on
— horses
considered
useless
by their
former
owners
is part
of a
loose
network
of 100
or more
rescue
groups
across
the
country
determined
to
provide
a haven
for
every
imperiled
horse.
Those
sanctuaries
face a
new
urgency:
saving
American
horses
from
being
slaughtered
across
the
border
in
Mexico
and
Canada.
So far
this
year,
some
55,000
horses
have
been
shipped
across
the
borders
to be
butchered,
often
under
conditions
far
worse
than
they
faced in
now-closed
U.S.
operations.
But
rescuers
are
struggling
with too
many
horses,
too
little
money
and no
national
standards.
"We get
requests
all the
time:
'My
horse is
blind
and
crippled.
Will you
take
it?' "
said
Jerry
Finch,
63, a
retired
home
improvement
salesman
who
founded
Habitat
for
Horses
nine
years
ago and
oversees
50 of
the
animals
on the
23-acre
sanctuary
and
about
300
elsewhere.
"I'd
like to
get it
down to
200. But
how do
you walk
away?"
Worker
Jennifer
Sylvester,
41,
whips up
special
dishes
for the
finicky
eaters,
such as
a
handful
of
grapes
and soup
like
meals
for
Sherman,
a black
Tennessee
walker
in his
late 20s
who has
hip
problems
and no
front
teeth.
When
handling
horses
that
kick
people,
she
approaches
carefully
and
makes
plenty
of
allowances.
How many
times
has she
been
kicked?
"Oh
gosh. I
couldn't
tell
you,"
Sylvester
says
with a
good-natured
laugh.
"Recently
I walked
up to a
sleeping
horse.
He
side-kicked
me."
The
movement
to save
U.S.
horses
from
abandonment
or
slaughter
is two
decades
or so
behind
the
movement
to
rescue
common
household
pets.
The lag,
say
those
involved,
is
because
of the
greater
expense
of
keeping
horses
and
fewer
contributors
to their
care.
So while
spay and
neuter
programs
for cats
and dogs
are
common,
few if
any
programs
help
horse
owners
with the
cost of
veterinarian-assisted
euthanasia,
which
usually
runs
$100 to
$150, or
of
castrating
stallions.
Easing
financial
strain
Nicholas
Dodman,
director
of the
animal
behavior
clinic
at Tufts
University,
hopes to
persuade
veterinarians
to
provide
free or
low-cost
euthanasia
at
designated
sites
around
the
country,
to ease
the
financial
burden
on
owners
who
otherwise
would
sell old
or
unwanted
horses
at
auction
to a
high-bidding
"killer
buyer"
who
supplies
slaughterhouses.
Last
year,
Dodman
helped
found
Veterinarians
for
Equine
Welfare,
but the
group
has
accomplished
little
more
than
setting
up a Web
site. He
said
they are
stymied
by lack
of money
and an
inability
to
solicit
help.
"We want
to do
mass
e-mails
and a
mass
letter-writing
campaign
but we
don't
have
addresses
or
e-mails,"
Dodman
said.
Outsourced
operations
The
group
was
formed
to
counter
the
pro-slaughter
stance
of the
two
major
veterinarian
associations,
the
American
Veterinary
Medical
Association
and
American
Association
of
Equine
Practitioners.
Those
groups
and the
American
Quarter
Horse
Association
correctly
predicted
that
horses
would
suffer
more if
U.S.
operations
closed
and
traders
simply
outsourced
the job.
In
September,
the
Houston
Chronicle
visited
a
municipal
plant in
Juarez,
Mexico,
where
horses —
90
percent
of them
from the
United
States —
were
paralyzed
with
knife
hacks,
then
hoisted
upside
down and
their
throats
slit.
Killing
them
with
captive
bolt
guns had
been the
standard
at U.S.
plants,
but
court
rulings
this
year
closed
those
operations.
Exports
of
horses
for
slaughter
are
surging
as a
result,
up 370
percent
to
Mexico
so far
this
year,
though
overall,
15,000
fewer
American
horses
have
been
killed
compared
with the
same
time
last
year.
Dodman
and
others
are
holding
out for
a
legislative
fix, the
pending
American
Horse
Slaughter
Prevention
Act,
which
would
prohibit
the
slaughter
of
horses
anywhere
in the
United
States
and bar
the
export
of
horses
for
slaughter.
Horse
slaughtering
in this
country
was
halted
this
year
because
the only
states
in which
it was
occurring
—
Illinois
and
Texas —
banned
it.
But if
American
horses
were
protected
from
slaughter,
it's
hard to
say
whether
there
would be
enough
havens
for the
ones
that
owners
were
willing
to give
away.
Horse
slaughter
number
More
than
140,000
American
horses
were
turned
into
meat
last
year,
about
1.5
percent
of the
9.2
million
horses
the
American
Horse
Council
estimates
reside
in the
United
States,
according
to
government
figures.
Finch
calls
the
number
going to
slaughter
negligible
and said
such
horses
could
easily
be
absorbed
by
rescue
groups
and by
families
if
slaughter
were no
longer
an
option.
"If the
killer
buyers
don't
buy
them,
someone
else
will.
And the
older
and sick
ones
should
be
euthanized,"
he said.
There's
no
central
registry
for
rescue
groups —
the
closest
thing to
it might
be the
Web site
of the
American
Horse
Defense
Fund —
and no
government
agency
regulates
them.
Rescue
organizations
number
in the
hundreds,
from the
tiny
ones
with a
horse or
two to
the
large,
New
York-based
sanctuary
for
retired
racehorses.
The
Thoroughbred
Retirement
Foundation
cares
for
1,200
horses
spread
out in
foster
homes in
11
states.
The
organization
receives
some of
its
money
from the
racing
industry.
The
Cleveland
Amory
Black
Beauty
Ranch,
operated
by the
Humane
Society
of the
United
States
in East
Texas
near
Athens,
takes
care of
about
1,200
horses.
Last
week,
Dawn
Mellen,
of San
Diego,
started
a new
organization,
After
the
Finish
Line,
that
will
raise
money to
help
care for
retired
racehorses.
Mellen
said the
group
raised
$7,000
in its
first
week.
Three
months
ago, the
Miracle
Ranch
Foundation
opened a
35-acre
Hill
Country
sanctuary
in
Bandera
County.
Jake
Borne
said
eight
horses
are
being
cared
for now;
the
organization
can take
in 22
more.
"Our
main
objective
is to
take
horses
about to
be
slaughtered,"
he said.
From
retiree
to
rescuer
Finch,
the
founder
of
Habitat
for
Horses,
did not
set out
to
become
an
anti-slaughter
activist.
In 1998,
he was
retired,
living
on a
ranch in
Galveston
County,
trying
his hand
at
writing
until
someone
mentioned
something
about a
starving
horse on
a nearby
farm.
"The
judge
(in the
starving
horse
case)
said,
'If you
want to
do
something,
you're
going to
have it
do it
yourself,'
" Finch
recalled.
Finch
took
three
courses
tailored
to law
enforcement
on
equine
cruelty,
bought a
larger
property
and set
up
Habitat
for
Horses
as an
organization
that
would
both
investigate
cruelty
cases
and give
shelter
to
horses
the
courts
ordered
seized.
Soon,
folks
were
bringing
him
starving
horses
and
authorities
began
calling
him to
help
with
cruelty
investigations.
Today,
his
organization
relies
on three
paid
staff,
2,500
volunteers
and
private
donations
that
covered
its
$425,000
budget.
Most of
the
rescued
horses
are
eventually
put up
for
adoption.
Finch
would
love
nothing
more
than to
be put
out of
business,
but
judging
from two
new
skinny
arrivals,
that
isn't
likely.
Many of
the
newcomers
arrive
in such
bad
shape,
he
notes,
that not
even a
slaughterhouse
would
want
them.
Source:
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5231662.html |