Also maybe this year, some of the organizations that have been participating didn't get organized and didn't do it.

I can't even think of a good- enough, pathetic analogy for shooting a bison resting on the ground.

A growing trend is called safe havens. These are cooperative agreements between shelters for women and shelters for animals.

This is a step in the right direction, but until we stop horse slaughter altogether, we will have to worry about every horse that is sold even under this type of program.

This is a very innovative, new approach, and it makes perfect sense because the protection order is a critical stage for women and others seeking protection.

You know it's that stretch of food that maybe none of us would need. But it is very helpful in a time of need.

This agency is bending over backwards to accommodate an industry that Congress and the American people want shut down. There is far too much concern about perpetuating horse slaughter on the part of USDA.

We keep doing stretch records each year, but for our size community, we'd probably be compared to communities with populations of three to four hundred thousand.