Friday, February 01, 2008

Add Horses To The List Of Those Losing Their Homes To Foreclosure

In Minnesota, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports:
  • The ever-worsening story of foreclosures in America now counts among its victims the family dog, the pet cat and even the farmer's horse. [...] "I'm getting skinny horses in here that people have walked away from," said Drew Fitzpatrick, director of the Minnesota Hooved Animal Rescue Foundation, based in Zimmerman, Minn. It used to be that for every abandoned horse there was a story of mental illness, divorce or cancer of its owner, said Fitzpatrick. "Now it's bankruptcy and ARM foreclosure. Rural America is really starting to get punched."

***

  • The problem has been exceedingly acute for horse owners, who were already facing high feed costs because of rising commodity prices and the recent elimination of horse slaughterhouses in America. That market -- a federal ban recently closed the last three such slaughterhouses in the United States -- once provided horse owners with an option that paid about $600 per horse, when there was nowhere else to turn. Reports have cropped up of horses wandering the Florida Everglades and coal mines in Kentucky, where owners too poor to care for them have set them free to forage on their own. A horse owner recently euthanized more than 80 horses, most of them Shetland ponies, in Grey Eagle, Minn., northwest of St. Cloud, because of rising feed costs and her own poor health. [...] Fitzpatrick, of the Hooved Animal Rescue Foundation, said she took a call this week from the sheriff in Morrison County in central Minnesota, who reported a herd of horses running free in the area. "He just said it looks like another foreclosure," she said.

For more, see Four walls no more for 4-legged friends (As more Minnesotans lose their homes to foreclosure, many are finding they're also forced to give up their pets and livestock).

See also, Pioneer Press: All the Dying Horses: Neglect cases soaring in Minnesota (Horse neglect and starvation are on the rise in Minnesota, the result of a suddenly sour economy. Some experts call it the Hobby Horse Syndrome. Drew Fitzpatrick, who devotes her life to rescuing the animals, is less polite) (when this link expires, try here) for the same story).

For more on foreclosures and family pets, go here, and go here. petsII and foreclosures