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Updates from Utah Gov - Organizations

Monday, September 12, 2016 - 3:45pm

Lawsuits & Public Outrage Halt Dangerous BLM Wild Horse Sterilization Experiments

 

Washington, DC (September 9, 2016) -  This morning, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) notified The Cloud Foundation (TCF) and the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign (AWHPC) that today it cancelled highly controversial sterilization (spaying) experiments on wild mares.

 

This reversal comes in the wake of massive public opposition and three separate lawsuits, including a Motion for Preliminary Injunction filed by TCF and AWHPC, seeking an injunction under the First Amendment of the Constitution to allow them to video record the proceedings.

 

Responding to BLM’s decision to drop the sterilization research, TCF and AWHPC attorney Nick Lawton of Meyer, Glitzenstein and Eubanks, stated, “the BLM's withdrawal of its invasive sterilization experiments reveals, more than anything else, that the agency knows the public will not accept these inhumane sterilization practices. We sued to protect our clients' First Amendment right to document the BLM's actions and to hold them publicly accountable for their treatment of wild horses. The litigation and advocacy efforts that led up to the lawsuits clearly demonstrate that surgically sterilizing wild horses is not socially acceptable and we are glad the BLM acknowledged this and withdrew the entire Decision Record authorizing the experiments.”

Ginger Kathrens, TCF Volunteer Executive Director states:

 

“The sterilization research was a path to destroying wild horses, by destroying the very essence of what makes them wild – their natural behaviors.  Now we must remain vigilant to ensure that the agency does not pursue the 'euthanasia' of wild horses in holding or the castration of wild stallions, and instead works with advocates to develop wide-scale, humane PZP fertility control programs as recommended by the National Academy of Sciences three years ago.”

 

At the same time as the BLM informed TCF and AWHPC that it was canceling the sterilization research, the BLM National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board passed a resolution urging the “euthanasia” of wild horses currently in government holding facilities. (Currently 45,000 wild horses and burros are held in short- and long-term holding facilities.)

 

The resolution is the culmination of decades of BLM mismanagement of wild horses and burros and the public rangelands. Livestock has historically degraded public lands and the BLM has created a crisis both on and off the range by continuing to use roundups and removals to manage wild horses and burros instead using humane fertility control, which has been available for nearly 30 years and is recommended by the National Academy of Sciences.

 

Ginger Kathrens was the sole dissenting vote against the Advisory Board resolution calling for the 'euthanasia' of horses in holding. 

 

Suzanne Roy, AWHPC Executive Director stated:

 

“While cancellation of the sterilization experiments is a major victory, Americans will not stand by and allow the killing of tens of thousands of wild horses holding facilities. If the agency thought the public was opposed to sterilization, wait until it sees what happens in response to the proposed mass killing of these American icons." 

 

On August 15, 2016, TCF and AWHPC filed a Motion for Preliminary Injunction to stop the experiments unless the agency allowed public observation and videotaping of the invasive procedures. 

 

Government lawyers this morning informed the groups that that the agency did not intend to pursue the surgical sterilization of mares at this time, if ever.

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2016 COUNTY CASH RENTS 

 

County-level estimates for 2016 cash rents for irrigated and non-irrigated cropland and pastureland are now available, according to the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.  The estimates, based primarily on surveys conducted with farmers and ranchers, can be accessed using the QuickStats online database, found here:  http://www.nass.usda.gov/Quick_Stats/ 

 

Find other agricultural statistics for your county, State, and the Nation at www.nass.usda.gov/  For state specific questions please contact:  

 

 

 Arizona – Dave DeWalt   1-800-645-7286  Colorado – William R. Meyer  1-800-392-3202  Montana – Eric Sommer  1-800-835-2612  New Mexico – Longino Bustillos 1-800-530-8810  Utah – John Hilton   1-800-747-8522  Wyoming – Rhonda Brandt  1-800-892-1660 

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State Board to Recommend Legislative Changes to

Utah’s Assessment and Accountability Systems

 

SALT LAKE CITY – The Utah State Board of Education will recommend considerable changes for the state’s assessment and accountability system to the Utah Legislature later this month, after voting Friday to affirm a framework proposal made by a Board task force.

The Board was asked by the Education Interim Committee to bring recommendations to the committee’s Sept. 20 meeting. Following that presentation, the Board will gather feedback from stakeholders throughout Utah and review that feedback during its November meeting. Later that month, the Board intends to present potential legislation for adoption as an Education Interim Committee bill for the 2017 General Session.

“We look forward to working with the Legislature and other stakeholders to develop a meaningful and robust assessment and accountability system that is both aligned with the State Board of Education’s strategic priorities and better informs educators and parents on student performance,” said Accountability Task Force Chair and State Board Member Brittney Cummins.

Recommendations will include:

·        Eliminating SAGE for grades 9-12, beginning in the 2017-18 school year, and using ACT Aspire for grades 9 and 10, and adding ACT Writing to the regular 11th-grade ACT offering;

·        Adding metrics to the School Grading Act for high schools, including advanced course offerings, CTE certificates, combined GPA on core courses, improvements for at-risk populations, and progress for English learner students;

·        Adding metrics to the School Grading Act for elementary schools, including grades 1-3 reading progress, progress for English learner students, and indicators that may include teacher absenteeism and student suspension rates;

·        Eliminating SAGE writing for all but grades 5 and 8 and putting a 50-minute time limit on those assessments; and

·        Suspending the designation of turnaround schools for one year to allow for transition. 

http://schoolboard.utah.gov/