NEWPORT-Local animal control officers might feel the
tightening cinch of a nationwide equine abandonment problem in Cocke County.
As a result of
the rising cost of fuel, feed and veterinary care, many animal control agencies
across the United States are receiving reports of abandoned horses. In some
western states, horse owners have abandoned their animals on BLM (Bureau of
Land Management) tracts because they simply can't cope with the cost associated
with horse ownership.
The Plain Talk
was recently contacted by Debbie Gregg, who has heard reports from Cocke County
Animal Control Officer Scotty Shelton and CCSD Deputies Hollis Emmons and Alton
Cureton (both horse owners) regarding horses found roaming loose with no one
making claims to their ownership.
Though Shelton
didn't' say horse abandonment is a 'problem' in Cocke County, he did say,
"I have already run across two cases in which eight horses were
found," said Shelton. "Nobody knows where they came from."
Shelton said both he and the deputies (who have worked with the issue during
their off-time) have tried to find places to put the animals. "What's
happening is they (owners) just can't afford to feed them. It's hard to find
out who they belong to if no one claims them."
One heated
issue associated with horse abandonment could be the closure of three horse
slaughterhouses in the United States. Though highly controversial, until the
past two years, two slaughterhouses in Texas and one in Illinois (all owned by
Belgium companies) still slaughtered horses for consumption by European diners.
Several animal
rights activists and equine groups argued that the sale of horses to those
slaughterhouses didn't mean unhealthy animals were being placed on the kill
floor but that "kill buyers" were purchasing healthy animals from
auctions to sell to European diners. According to Front Range Equine Rescue, a
501 C non-profit organization dedicated to stopping the abuse and neglect of
horses located in Lakespur, Co., "USDA (studies) show that 92-percent of
horses slaughtered in the United States are in good condition."
According to
an article in Front Range Equine on Oct. 9, 2007, "While state laws in
Illinois and Texas have put a recent stop to the domestic slaughter of horses
for human consumption, The American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act (S.311/H.R.
503), will prohibit their export to Mexico, Canada and further abroad. The bill
enjoys bi-partisan support with 31 co-sponsors in the United States Senate and
186 co-sponsors in the United States House of Representatives to date."
Regardless of
an individual's stance on the slaughterhouse issue, nationwide cases of horse
abandonment have been reported and prices of ownership and responsibility seem
to play a larger part in the issue.
Cocke County's
Extension Agent Steven Huff said, "The price of everything from buying hay
and feed is high. There's not a slaughter market now."
Regarding
horse ownership, Huff agrees many horse owners are responsible with their
animals, but some should study what ownership entails. "Some people get a
horse thinking it is a pet, not realizing all the additional costs (vet,
farrier, medicine, etc.) that come with them. First-time owners should research
or do their homework for costs to feed it per month...it's better off to do
your homework first than to buy one and realize you can't afford them."
Anyone who
wants to report an abandoned horse may contact Scotty Shelton, animal control
officer, at (423) 237-4472; The County Mayor's Office at 623-8791 or Debbie
Gregg at 623-1322.
There are about 9.5 million horses in the United States
with Tennessee typically ranking second in equine production behind Texas.
According to the University of Tennessee's Veterinary institute,
"Tennessee's horse industry, estimated at more than $290 million, ranks
near the top among animal industries in the state."