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Wild Horse Advocacy group "ambushed" by government advisory panel

Representatives of the Help Alberta Wildies Society (HAWS) say they were ambushed at an August 13 meeting of a provincial government advisory committee that was formed to create a framework for how to deal with Alberta's wild horse population.
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Some of the wild horses HAWS president Darrell Glover monitors in the Williams Creek valley southwest of Sundre. 

A wild horses advocacy group and the government advisory panel it was apart of have butted heads over the government's plans for the future of the province's feral horse population, plans that the group calls “equine genocide.” 

At an August 13 meeting of the Alberta government's Feral Horse Advisory Committee (FHAC) in Calgary, representatives of the advocacy group Help Alberta Wildies Society (HAWS) said they were “ambushed” by the government panel’s request that each group on the 14 member panel sign a confidentiality clause in a new Terms of Reference (TOR) that would bar the sharing of committee discussions with the general public. 

“By signing this TOR we would have been muted and bound by the agreement to keep Wild Horse management plans secret from all of you,” wrote HAWS founder and president Darrell Glover in a post on the group’s Facebook page. “Essentially, they would expect HAWS to become a party to their secret plans to Equine Genocide.”

The group refused to sign and was removed from the advisory panel. 

Dating back several years, HAWS has been a vocal critic of the provincial government's management plan for the wild horse population. Debbie McGauran, a member of HAWS who was at the August 13 meeting, said the government’s management plan involves giving the feral horse population contraception to slow, or even completely halt, the growth of the wild horse population. 

“This committee was formed for the complete eradication of wild horses,” McGauran told the Cochrane Eagle days after the FHAC meeting.

McGauran said the government committee has been “unfairly stacked” with wild horse antagonists that largely represent the interests of the cattle industry, and other groups that would like to see the wild horse population decline. 

The Alberta government says the advisory committee is exactly that-- an advisory group that helps to give the Province direction on certain matters.

“The FHAC discusses tools and options to balance the value many Albertans place on seeing feral horses on the landscape with matters like public safety, protecting wildlife habitat, supporting local industry and ensuring sustainable use of public lands,” a statement authored by the Alberta government reads. 

“The committee offers expert advice to improve feral horse management in Alberta. We are improving past approaches to feral horse management by incorporating new knowledge and the latest science,” the statement continues. 

“This is quite political,” said McGauran, who says HAWS has counted less than 1,500 horses total on 5.6 million acres of space. McGauran says that the FHAC sought the removal of HAWS from the committee to silence opposition to the government's plans. But the province says otherwise. 

The office of Todd Loewen, the Minister for Forestry and Parks, said that members of the Feral Horse Advisory Committee are required to sign the terms of reference to remain members in good standing, “a standard practice on advisory committees.”

"The Help Alberta Wildies Society did not wish to sign the terms of reference, and they are no longer a member of the committee," the office’s statement reads. 

The official framework for the FHAC states that one of the committee’s primary objectives is to “maintain a presence of feral horses on the landscape in the horse capture area while recognizing the need to steward the landscape in an ecologically sustainable manner” and to “mitigate risk to public safety or private property.” 

HAWS claims were not confirmed by Loewen's office, nor is there any mention of the use or planning of the use of contraception to quell the wild horse population in Alberta by the provincial government. 

“With us gone, the entire committee is now stacked with yes votes to begin implementation of the ‘flawed’ and non-scientific Feral Horse Management Framework,” wrote Glover, the president of HAWS. 

HAWS expects to compiled 10,000 signatures by the end of August for a petition that calls for legislation to establish a moratorium on wild horse captures and removals, and the use of contraceptives on Alberta's wild horses until an independent Wild Horse Management Council is created “with representation from Indigenous leaders, advocacy and rescue organizations, conservationists, wildlife biologists, ecologists, animal welfare experts, and policy experts.”

 

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