Current:Home > InvestWild horses facing removal in a North Dakota national park just got another strong ally: Congress -Infinite Edge Learning
Wild horses facing removal in a North Dakota national park just got another strong ally: Congress
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-07 02:29:46
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Advocates for some 200 wild horses roaming North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt National Park are hoping a signal of support from Congress will prevent the removal of the beloved animals from the rugged landscape.
A National Park Service decision is expected around April as to the horses’ future in the park’s colorful, rolling Badlands. It’s part of an ongoing process to craft a park management plan for “livestock” — a term horse advocates reject.
Republican Sen. John Hoeven ‘s legislation, tucked in the annual Interior and Environment budget bill that Congress passed and President Joe Biden signed, strongly recommends that the Park Service keep the horses in place. It also signals a potential future action that would deny any funding intended to remove them.
“Now we’ll continue to have a dialogue with them and hopefully get to a good solution,” Hoeven said in an interview with The Associated Press.
A remaining question is how many horses would ensure the long-term preservation of the herd. Advocates want to see a genetically viable herd of at least 150 horses to avoid inbreeding issues. Park Superintendent Angie Richman has said the horses, if they ultimate stay, would still have to be reduced to 35 to 60 animals under a 1978 environmental assessment.
Richman and the National Park Service did not respond to emails for comment on Hoeven’s legislation.
Previously, park officials have said their evaluation of whether the horses should stay is in line with their policies to remove non-native species when they pose a potential risk to resources. The park has proposed removing the horses quickly or gradually or taking no action.
Advocates have feared a predetermined ouster of the horses, whose predecessors were accidentally fenced into the park in the 1950s and were subject to subsequent roundups.
The horses’ origins include Native American tribes, area ranches and domestic stallions introduced to the park from the late 1970s through the 1990s, said Castle McLaughlin, who researched the horses as a graduate student while working for the Park Service in North Dakota in the 1980s.
“They really are sort of living history because they reflect the kinds of horses people in North Dakota, both Native and non-Native, had over the last 150 years,” she said.
The horses are often seen along the park’s scenic road and hiking trails, thrilling visitors and photographers who happen upon them.
A vast majority of public comments on the decision process has favored keeping the horses.
Chasing Horses Wild Horse Advocates President Chris Kman said she is hopeful the legislation results in the horses staying, but she awaits the park’s decision and wonders what the legislation means for a management plan for the horses.
“I don’t think that any of us will trust, even with an act of Congress, that the park is going to do the right thing and allow a genetically viable herd of horses to stay,” she said. “...Their attitude all along has pretty much been, you know, ‘We can’t keep the horses. We understand the public wants them, but we’re not doing it anyway,’ no matter what the overwhelming response was.’”
Last year, Gov. Doug Burgum offered state collaboration for maintaining the horses in the park. Richman has said park officials “are certainly willing to work with the governor and the state to find a good outcome.”
All of the horses are in the park’s South Unit near Medora. Park officials’ ultimate decision will also affect about nine longhorn cattle in the park’s North Unit.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Ready to vote in 2024? Here are the dates for Republican and Democratic primaries and caucuses, presidential election
- 3 adults with gunshot wounds found dead in Kentucky home set ablaze
- ‘3 Body Problem’ to open SXSW, ‘The Fall Guy’ also to premiere at Austin festival
- Trump's 'stop
- 2 young boys, brothers ages 6 and 8, die after falling into icy pond in Wisconsin: Police
- A North Dakota lawmaker is removed from a committee after insulting police in a DUI stop
- Adan Canto, Designated Survivor and X-Men actor, dies at age 42 after cancer battle
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Lisa Rinna's Confession About Sex With Harry Hamlin After 60 Is Refreshingly Honest
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Elderly couple found dead in South Carolina bedroom after home heater reached 1,000 degrees
- First time filing your taxes? Here are 5 tips for tax season newbies
- TSA found a record number of guns at airport security checkpoints in 2023. Almost all of them were loaded.
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Engine maker Cummins to repair 600,000 Ram trucks in $2 billion emissions cheating scandal
- Kentucky is the all-time No. 1 team through 75 storied years of AP Top 25 college basketball polls
- Christie ends his presidential bid in an effort to blunt Trump’s momentum before Iowa’s GOP caucuses
Recommendation
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
Pat McAfee announces Aaron Rodgers’ appearances are over for the rest of this NFL season
Kentucky Derby purse raised to $5 million for 150th race in May
Christie ends his presidential bid in an effort to blunt Trump’s momentum before Iowa’s GOP caucuses
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
New Mexico Legislature confronts gun violence, braces for future with less oil wealth
Ex-Norwich University president accused of violating policies of oldest private US military college
Pete Carroll out as Seattle Seahawks coach in stunning end to 14-year run leading team