Reducing the number of wild horses and burros on Western public lands could , the acting director of the Bureau of Land Management told reporters during a news conference this week.
This is the second time this month that William Perry Pendley has focused his attention on the animals. In early October, Pendley told environmental journalists gathered at a conference in Fort Collins, Colorado, that wild horses and burros were the most important issue facing public lands.
We have 88,000 wild horses and burros on our western federal lands and they are causing havoc, he said.
Pendleys relationship with the animals, which were first reintroduced to the West during Spanish exploration, stretches back to his days as a lawyer for the non-profit Mountain States Legal Foundation. In 2014, he sued the federal government on behalf of stockgrowers to remove the animals from the checkerboard lands of southern Wyoming.
Congress has placed a mandatory, non-discretionary duty on the Secretary to remove wild horses that stray from public lands onto private lands, upon the private landowners notification, he wrote in 2015.
Pendley lost the lawsuit, but his work on legal issues like this has raised questions about potential conflicts of interest. After all, he signed a Trump administration ethics pledge recusing himself from issues related to clients he used to work for. But the pledge has a two-year statute of limitations, and the lawsuit ended in 2016.
Pendley told reporters his agency is working on a report to Congress on ways to shrink the number of wild horses in the region.
Wild horses are federally protected by the 1971 , which included . The U.S. Bureau of Land Management estimates wild horse numbers are currently more than three times above the prescribed federal limit.
This story was produced by the Mountain West 做窪惇蹋 Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUER in Salt Lake City, KUNR in Nevada, The OConner Center for the Rocky Mountain West in Montana, and KRCC and KUNC in Colorado.
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