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Idaho lawmaker wants U.S. horse slaughterhouses

BOISE, Idaho (AP)--A southeastern Idaho lawmaker wants horse slaughterhouses operating again in the United States to deal with the glut of unwanted horses resulting from the faltering economy that has led to cases of neglect and abandonment.

Rep. Thomas Loertscher, R-Iona, has drafted a nonbinding request to Congress backing a return of slaughterhouses so there is a market for horses people can no longer afford to feed.

"It's not a pleasant subject," he told the Idaho Statesman. "There are people that are really feeling the economic pinch right now. They're just having a hard time knowing what to do with these horses."

There is no federal law banning the slaughter of horses for food, but opposition to the killing of horses for that purpose shut down that industry in the U.S.

The last domestic slaughterhouse closed in 2007, and American horses are now being sent to slaughter in Canada and Mexico. But most people can't afford to ship their horses outside the U.S. due to low market values for horses and high transportation costs.

Still, the number of American horses being slaughtered across North America remains the same despite the closure of domestic plants, said officials with the Humane Society of the United States.

In 2006, about 104,000 horses were slaughtered in the U.S.

"The horse is an American icon, and it is a betrayal of our responsibility to these animals to treat them like cheap commodities and send them across our borders for slaughter," said Wayne Pacelle, the president and chief executive of the Humane Society of the United States, in a statement by Americans Against Horse Slaughter.

But Sen. Les Bock, D-Boise, said a better way to deal with unwanted horses needs to be found rather than abandoning them or letting them starve.

"While I don't know anybody who would feel really great about putting down horses or slaughtering horses, it is not humane to starve them," Bock said. "We need the ability to remove those excess horses from the horse population. It's a big mistake to shut down these horse slaughterhouse plants."

Bock said his family recently had to euthanize a horse, with the remains sent to a rendering plant.

"That was a real traumatic experience," he said.

More than 100,000 excess horses are produced nationwide each year, said Jeff Rosenthal, executive director of the Idaho Humane Society.

"Too many horses are being bred for which there is no use and no homes," Rosenthal said. "People breed horses without a thought, without thinking of the actual market. Only the very, very best have any market whatsoever. All the rest of them are the ones that end up without a place to live."


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Reader Comments
Snugglez25 — 05/17/2009 10:05:06
I think that some of the people that work for our goverment wether it be a govenor, senator, house member whatever...Talk at times like they never went to school to get an education.. and they like to make a lot of false statements.. Like Loinpa said owners do not need to pay to transport their horses to slaughter, that is what the auctions are for... THAT IS COMPLETELY FALSE.. I think that if it was so tragic for him to have put his horse down why did he take it to the rendering plant why didn't he keep it ashes or bury it??? Makes no sense.. some people just don't care anymore about anything.. especailly animals.. I don't know who the heck could eat a horse it's like eating your pet dog or cat or maybe you child.. Because some people see their pets as their kids.. I just see no need for horses to be slaughtered in this matter anywhere... horses were not put on this earth to become for people... I totally disagree I do not think they should bring horse slaughter house back.

Reader Comments
Tilly — 04/24/2009 03:04:12
People are having to pay for horses they take to a sell barn. The sell barns are getting stuck with unwanted animals. Regulations were in place to transport horses humanely, now there is nothing let alone what happens to them once they get to an out of country slaughter plant. I resent the fact that I'm being told where and how to dispose of my horse. It comes down to the fact, "Horses are an animal and a business!" Why are we doing away with another business! This situation of no slaughterhouses may mean an end to American history. Think about that!

Reader Comments
LorInPA — 04/13/2009 08:04:50
There are a couple of really ridiculous statements in this piece of journalism. For example "The last domestic slaughterhouse closed in 2007, and American horses are now being sent to slaughter in Canada and Mexico. But most people can't afford to ship their horses outside the U.S. due to low market values for horses and high transportation costs. " You are implying that horse owners have to pay to send their horses to slaughter which is totally untrue. At any local auction house there are meat buyers there waiting to buy horses to send to kill. Slaughter is the easiest way to get rid of a horse - you have no body and you get a few bucks for it. No matter that your horse is going on the worst transport trip of it's life, and if it survives the journey it will be killed in a cruel and inhumane way.

And Senator Bock says having a horse euthanized (humanely killed by a Veterinarian admininstering a quick but deadly mixture of medication) and then having the body taken to a rendering plant was traumatic. Poor baby. Imagine how traumatic it would have been for the horse had he been sent to slaughter!

The bottom line here is that some of these legislators are trying to create an opportunity a market horses as food source animals and begin to breed for slaughter. The EU won't allow our Beef in, so the AG community sees an opportunity with the horses. I suggest Big Beef find a way to clean up it's own house, and leave the equines alone. They are not food source animals!

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