Celebration seeks extension of comment period Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Celebration seeks extension of comment period
Tuesday, September 5, 2023

The Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration sent a letter seeking a 60-day extension to the comment period on the USDA’s proposed rule published at 88 FR 56924. The letter, sent from Patrick F. Philbin, counsel for The Celebration, points out two major reasons the extension should be granted.

The first highlights the enormous impact the rule would have and how many horses would be affected by the elimination of pads and action devices. This rule would effectively eliminate the entire performance division of horses.

In addition, the letter points out that the USDA published the proposed rule seeking comment just days before the 85th Annual Celebration. The Celebration, and its SHOW HIO, has limited resources to devote to comment on the rule and those resources will be dedicated to The Celebration and the ensuing required reporting by USDA until mid-September. This timeline would exhaust half the comment period and only leave 30 days for The Celebration to comment.

The data collected by the SHOW HIO will be critical in the response and it will take time for that data over the last six years to be accumulated and analyzed to help support the comment from The Celebration. In addition, data from this year’s Celebration will also be critical as the rule eliminates all HIOs and changes the inspection process.

The USDA has not yet replied to The Celebration’s request seeking additional time. The original comment period will end on October 21, 2023 if no extension is granted.

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Celebration seeks extension of comment period

Celebration seeks extension of comment period

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

 

The Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration sent a letter seeking a 60-day extension to the comment period on the USDA’s proposed rule published at 88 FR 56924. The letter, sent from Patrick F. Philbin, counsel for The Celebration, points out two major reasons the extension should be granted.

 

The first highlights the enormous impact the rule would have and how many horses would be affected by the elimination of pads and action devices. This rule would effectively eliminate the entire performance division of horses.

 

In addition, the letter points out that the USDA published the proposed rule seeking comment just days before the 85th Annual Celebration. The Celebration, and its SHOW HIO, has limited resources to devote to comment on the rule and those resources will be dedicated to The Celebration and the ensuing required reporting by USDA until mid-September. This timeline would exhaust half the comment period and only leave 30 days for The Celebration to comment.

 

The data collected by the SHOW HIO will be critical in the response and it will take time for that data over the last six years to be accumulated and analyzed to help support the comment from The Celebration. In addition, data from this year’s Celebration will also be critical as the rule eliminates all HIOs and changes the inspection process.

 

The USDA has not yet replied to The Celebration’s request seeking additional time. The original comment period will end on October 21, 2023 if no extension is granted




USDA proposed rule released from OMB

    The proposed rule to amend the Horse Protection Act that USDA sent to the Office of Management and Budget was released by OMB on August 10, 2023. The proposed rule was sent to OMB on September 2, 2022 for its review. The new rule has not yet been released publicly but should be in the next several days.  Until the public release, the contents of the rule remain unknown.

After USDA releases the rule, they will provide for a comment period, most likely to be 60 days.  The comment period on the withdrawal of the old 2017 rule closes on August 21, 2023 and should ultimately result in the formal withdrawal of the old rule.  This withdrawal was opposed by the Humane Society of the Unites States, however the district court allowed the USDA to formally go through the withdrawal process upon remand.

During its request to withdraw the old rule, USDA consistently claimed that a new, more effective rule would be forthcoming, so this is the expected timeline of the public release.  After the comment period closes, USDA will take time to review the comments, make any necessary changes and then will be required to send the rule back to OMB for a final review.  Once the rule becomes final, it will contain the final changes to the current Horse Protection Act and Regulations.  In that final release the timeline for implementation would also be specified.

The industry organizations will review the proposed rule when it is released publicly and file formal comments with regards to the contents and validity of the rule.  The industry has already retained counsel, Ellis George Cippolone out of Washington, D.C., to help with the filing of the comments.  This same firm is handling the comments on the withdrawal of the 2017 rule currently in the comment period.




USDA announces proposal to strengthen enforcement of the Horse Protection Act

USDA announces proposal to strengthen enforcement of the Horse Protection Act


The United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is seeking public input on a proposed rule to strengthen Horse Protection Act (HPA) requirements. These proposed changes aim to eliminate horse soring, a cruel and inhumane practice that gives horse owners and trainers an unfair advantage in walking horse competitions.

Walking horses are known for possessing a naturally high gait, but to be more successful in competitions some owners and trainers use improper training methods to exaggerate a horse’s gait. These inhumane methods may cause the horse to suffer from physical pain, distress, inflammation, or lameness while walking and moving.

“Soring has no place in walking horse shows. This unnecessary abuse harms horses and makes it harder for those who properly care for their horses to compete,” said Jenny Lester-Moffitt, Under Secretary for USDA Marking and Regulatory Programs. “By strengthening the HPA regulations, we can all work to eliminate soring, which will improve the welfare of horses competing in these shows and level the competitive playing field for everyone in the industry, which should only help it thrive.”

The proposed changes include:
•         relieving horse industry organizations and associations of all of their regulatory responsibilities, which will eliminate potential conflicts of interest and ensure impartiality of inspections;
•         establishing qualifying criteria for people applying to be inspectors, as well as processes for denying applications;
•         allowing event management to appoint an APHIS representative to conduct inspections;
•         prohibiting any device, method, practice, or substance that could mask evidence of soring, as well as all action devices and non-therapeutic pads and wedges, and substances applied above the hoof;
•         clarifying the “scar rule” by modifying the description of visible changes that indicate soring, and;
•         amending recordkeeping and reporting requirements for management at horse shows, exhibitions, sales, and auctions to increase oversight and prevent those that have been previously disqualified from participating in events.

Together, these changes will allow APHIS to screen, train and authorize qualified persons to conduct inspections at horse shows, horse exhibitions, horse sales, and horse auctions to ensure compliance with the HPA.

In 2017, APHIS withdrew its initial HPA final rule from public inspection in accordance with a memorandum that was issued by the Executive Office of the President. Following a lawsuit based on that action, on June 1, 2023, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued an order that would give the 2017 rule automatic effect if the agency does not take appropriate remedial action within 180 days to either promulgate an updated version of the rule, or otherwise remedy the deficiency in the withdrawal of the 2017 rule by conducting notice and comment rulemaking on the withdrawal. The agency published a proposed rule to withdraw the 2017 rule on July 20, 2023 which is available for public comment through August 21, 2023. Today, the agency is submitting the revised proposed rule that aims to strengthen regulations and modernize APHIS’ approach to this issue.

The HPA is a federal law that prohibits sored horses from participating in shows, exhibitions, sales or auctions. The HPA also prohibits the transportation of sored horses to or from any of these events.

This proposed rule may be viewed in today’s Federal Register or here. Beginning Monday, interested stakeholders may submit comments on the proposed rule at www.regulations.gov. APHIS will consider all comments received on or before October 20, 2023.




USDA to withdraw 2017 Rule Making:”HSUS Denounce USDA Plan to Withdraw 2017 Rule to Protect Horses”

Humane Society of the United States Denounce USDA Plan to Withdraw 2017 Rule to Protect Horses from Soring

horse soring2
A horse waits in a stable during an animal cruelty investigation by law enforcement officials and the Humane Society at the stables of well-known Tennessee walking horse trainer Jackie McConnell in Fayette County, Tenn. The undercover investigation led to felony criminal indictments against McConnell, for multiple violations of the federal Horse Protection Act. Evidence was found of soring, the application of painful chemicals, and heavy metal chains applied to the horses front legs. Photo by Lance Murphey
Credit: Lance Murphey/For The HSUS

Animal advocates urge swift implementation of strong new rule 

July 23, 2023 – The Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society Legislative Fund have denounced the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s proposal to withdraw a regulation to protect horses from the cruel and unlawful practice of “soring”, with no commitment to a timeline for implementing increased protections through a new proposed rule.

Soring is a practice in which trainers deliberately inflict pain on the legs and hooves of horses to produce an exaggerated gait known as the “big lick” that is rewarded in show circuits for Tennessee Walking Horses and related breeds. They do so through the application of caustic chemicals that burn the horses’ flesh, metal chains that strike against the inflamed tissue, tall and heavy platform shoes and extreme cutting of the animals’ soles down to their sensitive laminae (soft tissues).

The Horse Protection Act (HPA) was enacted in 1970 to end soring. However, industry inspectors currently tasked by USDA to uphold this law often look the other way, allowing soring to continue undetected and unabated. USDA data from 2018-2020 shows the department’s own veterinary inspectors found violations at a rate 403% higher than industry personnel.

Following a 2010 USDA inspector general’s audit report calling for an end to the failed system of industry self-policing, the agency agreed to abolish that scheme and replace it with a team of inspectors overseen by USDA.  In 2017, under the Obama Administration’s Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, the agency finalized a rule replacing industry inspectors with USDA-trained inspectors, among other protections. The rule was widely supported, with over 100,000 public comments and bipartisan endorsement from Congress. But it was quickly and unlawfully withdrawn by the Trump Administration.

Following litigation brought by the HSUS, HSLF, and several individuals, the D.C. Circuit ruled that USDA must properly withdraw the 2017 rule or implement it—a course of action USDA claims will interfere with new regulations it plans to promulgate.

However, since the fall of 2021, USDA has not made good on its promise that a strong new proposed rule was forthcoming – and none has been published for public comment. The Biden Administration’s proposal now, under Secretary Vilsack, to withdraw the 2017 rule without replacing it with any increased protections for horses leaves in place the unlawful regime in place that existed prior to the finalization of the rule. It could be months, or years, before a new rule is proposed and finalized. During that time, horses will continue to suffer.

“Soring is a perverse cruelty, carried out in secret by a small, institutionalized group of perpetrators seeking to cheat their way to glory in the showring,” said Sara Amundson, president of the Humane Society Legislative Fund. “It’s infuriating that after decades of continued equine cruelty, the Biden Administration withdrew USDA’s 2017 final rule without urgently pressing forward with the new HPA rule. The USDA must finalize this rule to end this abject equine cruelty now.”

“For years, we have worked for an effective rule to curb soring through enhanced inspections and penalties, and the USDA’s decision under President Biden to withdraw the 2017 rule without having a new rule in place is disheartening. Soring doesn’t deserve safe quarter of any kind, and we urge the White House to quickly finish its review of the new HPA rule and press for its swift finalization by the agency” said Kitty Block, president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States.

Ending horse soring is broadly supported by Congress. The Prevent All Soring Tactics (PAST) Act has strong bipartisan support and would codify key elements of the 2017 HPA rule. Congress has also expressed strong support for upgraded regulations, through appropriations language calling for the swift proposal, finalization, and publication of the new final rule.

Animal advocates can urge USDA to swiftly finalize a new rule to end soring here: Protect horses from the cruel act of soring.
Source: Humane Society of the United States




PAST Act reintroduced in Senate

PAST Act reintroduced in Senate


 

U.S. Senators Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Mark Warner (D-Virginia) have once again filed the PAST Act in the U.S. Senate.  The senators, who have very limited knowledge of the industry or the current state of the Tennessee Walking Horse, failed to modify the PAST Act which has failed to move forward at any previous point.

The National Academies of Sciences (NAS) recently competed an independent study that outlined many of the needed improvements to the inspection process.  The current inspection process, which is highly subjective and had its scar rule deemed “unenforceable” by the experts assembled by NAS, is left in place in the PAST Act.  Senators Crapo and Warner chose to ignore the experts and science and rather chose to appease the radical animal rights group and introduce an antiquated bill that doesn’t address the issues with the HPA.

The newly introduced PAST Act has little chance to move forward in the Senate and will again gain little to no support from lawmakers that are familiar with the industry. The co-sponsors consist of senators from states with very little, if any, Tennessee Walking Horse activity.

Industry leadership remains committed to following the science and incorporating improvements based upon the recommendation of NAS and other equine experts that help eliminate soring and allow the Tennessee Walking Horse to continue to compete on a level playing with other competitive show breeds.




Rehearing to Urge Jurisdiction over Constitutional Claim Against USDA ALJs

NCLA Seeks D.C. Cir. Rehearing to Urge Jurisdiction over Constitutional Claim Against U


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Joe Fleming, et al. v. U.S. Department of Agriculture

Washington, D.C., April 01, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A two-judge majority of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit erred in Fleming v. USDA in February when it refused to address the constitutionality of the multiple layers of for-cause removal protection enjoyed by administrative law judges (ALJs) at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The court remanded the issue back to USDA for initial consideration by the very ALJ whose constitutional status is under challenge. That remand not only failed to resolve the structural constitutional problem inherent in the statute but generated a second issue: whether USDA’s permissive claim-processing rules themselves bind Article III courts.

The New Civil Liberties Alliance, a nonpartisan, nonprofit civil rights group, today filed a petition for panel rehearing or rehearing en banc so that: (1) USDA may not shield its unconstitutional ALJs through strategic and inconsistent administrative exhaustion claims; and (2) the D.C. Circuit does not embrace a novel variety of “administrative exhaustion” that would force all issues appealed from agencies to first be heard by an ALJ. The statute requires exhaustion of administrative process, not prior raising to the ALJ of every issue, especially where the agency has signaled that it would not have ruled on an issue even if it had been raised more explicitly.

NCLA began as amicus curiae in this case, but the Fleming Petitioners are now NCLA clients. Those Petitioners, several horse trainers from Tennessee accused of violating the Horse Protection Act (HPA), should not be subjected to the needless delay and futility the majority’s remand order will cause. Their HPA liability, if any, should be determined promptly by a federal district court—or at least by an ALJ who does not enjoy unconstitutional protection from Presidential removal.

As Judge Rao established in her dissent, the Supreme Court made clear in Free Enterprise Fund v Public Co. Accounting Oversight Board that officers of the United States may not be insulated from removal by multiple layers of protection without running afoul of the clause in Article II of the Constitution that requires the President to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” NCLA’s amicus brief originally brought this very issue to the fore: As a consequence of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2018 decision in Lucia v. SEC, USDA’s ALJs are executive “officers” and must be removable in a way consistent with the Appointments Clause.

The Petitioners raised an Appointments Clause challenge to USDA’s ALJs during an agency HPA enforcement action. USDA insisted the issue must await an Article III court, but once in court, USDA reversed its stance and argued that Petitioners’ constitutional challenge must first go through the administrative process. A majority of the D.C. Circuit panel accepted the USDA’s reversal and remanded the case. The panel ruled that a statute requiring Petitioners first to go through the administrative process before seeking judicial review impliedly also required Petitioners to comply with every one of USDA’s claim-processing rules. According to the majority, an Article III court is powerless to waive non-compliance.

NCLA argues that the panel majority erred in creating the new variety of exhaustion, a non-jurisdictional yet mandatory exhaustion, that has no basis in law. In doing so, the panel converted USDA’s claim-processing rules into statutory requirements, which Congress did not do. The panel ruling strips courts of their inherent equitable discretion and robs Congress of its exclusive authority to set the jurisdiction of Article III courts. The decision also conflicts with precedential decisions of the D.C. Circuit indicating that there is no such thing as exhaustion that is mandatory but non-jurisdictional.

NCLA awaits decision in another ALJ case, Cochran v. SEC, from the en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. NCLA has also filed several amicus briefs on ALJ appointments and removal protection issues in Axon v. FTC and recently in Jarkesy v. SEC. The issue of administrative exhaustion has been previously raised in NCLA’s amicus brief in Carr v. Saul.

NCLA released the following statements:

“By avoiding an important constitutional issue squarely before the court, the panel majority created yet another constitutional issue. Courts must not hesitate to perform their judicial duty, or else another branch of government will fill that void and upset our system of checks and balances.”
— Jared McClain, Litigation Counsel, NCLA

“The panel’s decision makes little sense. It defers its decision on an important constitutional issue until after an administrative agency can address the issue, despite acknowledging that the agency lacks authority to decide it.”
— Richard Samp, Senior Litigation Counsel, NCLA

“Circuit courts’ refusal to hear properly presented challenges to agency ALJs’ removal protections in the order logic requires—before an unconstitutional to-be-vacated adjudication takes place—defies reason and disserves justice.”
— Peggy Little, Senior Litigation Counsel, NCLA

For more information about this case visit here.

ABOUT NCLA

NCLA is a nonpartisan, nonprofit civil rights group founded by prominent legal scholar Philip Hamburger to protect constitutional freedoms from violations by the Administrative State. NCLA’s public-interest litigation and other pro bono advocacy strive to tame the unlawful power of state and federal agencies and to foster a new civil liberties movement that will help restore Americans’ fundamental rights.

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Attachment




USDA vs FLEMING-D.C. Circuit Ducks Constitutionality of USDA ALJ’s — For Now

D.C. Circuit Ducks Constitutionality of USDA ALJ’s — For Now

John M. Simpson
USA February 22 2021

A divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit recently decided a significant case for those animal-related businesses who are subject to regulation by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Fleming v. U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture, No. 17-1246, 1249 & 1250 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 16, 2021).

The case arose out of administrative enforcement actions brought by USDA against certain individuals (the petitioners in Fleming) who had allegedly violated the Horse Protection Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1821 et seq., a statute that imposes penalties on those who enter sored horses in shows or auctions. As the majority opinion (Maj. Op.) described it, “‘soring’ refers to the practice of injuring a horse’s forelimbs so that it will quickly lift its feet as a result of the pain, inducing it to walk with a high-stepping gait considered desirable for shows and exhibitions.” Maj. Op. at 3-4. Petitioners did not respond to USDA’s administrative complaint. When the agency moved for a default before the USDA Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), Petitioners contended, among other things, that the ALJ was an “officer” of the United States who had not been appointed by the President in accordance with the Appointments Clause of the Constitution. The ALJ did not address the argument and entered the default orders. On appeal to the Judicial Officer — who acts as USDA’s final internal adjudicator — the default orders were affirmed, and the Judicial Officer ruled that the challenge to the constitutionality of the ALJ should be raised in the court of appeals. Petitioners then sought review in the D.C. Circuit.

While the petitions were pending, the Supreme Court decided Lucia v. SEC, 138 S. Ct. 2044 (2018), which held that SEC ALJ’s are “officers” whose appointments were invalid because they had not been appointed by the President. SEC ALJ’s were apparently not differently situated than USDA ALJ’s. Therefore, in light of Lucia, the government in the Fleming case “conceded that the ALJ who had decided petitioners’ cases was, as petitioners argued, an inferior officer who had been improperly appointed.” Slip op. at 6. The government therefore moved to remand the case so that new hearings could be conducted before properly appointed ALJ’s. Petitioners opposed the motion arguing that certain additional issues should be addressed, but the court disagreed in a majority opinion by Chief Judge Srinivasan but with an extended opinion by Judge Rao, concurring in part and dissenting in part.

The majority opinion rejected petitioner’s argument that USDA ALJ’s are “principal officers,” ruling instead that they are “inferior officers who can be appointed by department head like the Secretary of Agriculture.” Maj. Op. at 18. The Department’s ALJ’s are inferior officers because, even though they are not removable at will, they are subject to substantial oversight by the Secretary and their decisions may be appealed to the Judicial Officer. Id. at 18-19.

The majority also declined to address petitioners’ argument that the Judicial Officer was not properly appointed because the government represented that any appeal from new hearings before the agency would go to the Secretary not the Judicial Officer. Maj. Op. at 20. The majority also declined to address the argument that the agency had no authority to disqualify petitioners from events and to impose fines in the same proceeding, ruling that this could be addressed on remand. Id.

More significantly, however, the majority ruled that petitioners had not exhausted their administrative remedies with respect to the claim, raised for the first time on appeal, that, separate from the Appointments Clause issue, the very structure of the USDA ALJ position is unconstitutional pursuant to the decision in Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, 561 U.S. 477 (2010). That case held that the two layers of protection from removal of the board members of the agency in that case unconstitutionally infringed the President’s executive authority under the Constitution. Board members could only be removed by the SEC for good cause shown and SEC Commissioners could themselves only be removed for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance. USDA’s ALJ’s likewise have a similar dual layer of tenure: they can be removed by the Secretary only for good cause established by the Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB), and members of the MSPB may be removed by the President only for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance. Thus, runs the argument, this structure interferes with constitutional accountability because it means that ALJ’s are not subject to the President’s control, directly or indirectly.

The majority held that this issue should have been raised before the agency because the Horse Protection Act and the agency’s regulations required, not only exhaustion of administrative remedies, but also exhaustion of issues, i.e., an issue cannot be presented to the court unless it is first presented to the agency, in this case to the Judicial Officer. Maj. Op. at 14. The majority reached this result notwithstanding the fact that a USDA lawyer argued before the Judicial Officer in this very case that the Judicial Officer lacked authority to decide constitutional issues. Id. at 16.

In her separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part (Sep. Op.), Judge Rao disagreed with the majority on the exhaustion issue, opining that neither the Horse Protection Act nor the agency’s regulations created the absolute exhaustion requirement posited by the majority. Sep. Op. at 5-10. Judge Rao also believed that USDA should be judicially estopped from taking inconsistent positions on this issue. Id. at 12-16. As Judge Rao described it:

In the majority’s view, this court is barred from considering petitioners’ challenge until the agency considers it first — despite the fact the agency has steadfastly maintained it cannot consider structural constitutional challenges until we reach them first. The court refuses to act before the agency, while the agency refuses to act before the court — trapping petitioners in an administrative judicial hall of mirrors.

Sep. Op. at 1 (original emphasis).

As for the merits of the constitutional issue, Judge Rao found that the two layers of for-cause removal protection that apply to USDA ALJ’s is unconstitutional:

When the two for-cause removal restrictions are combined, neither the President nor the Secretary has any meaningful power to remove ALJs from office — for any reason, much less for “simple disagreement with [their] policies or priorities.” Free Enterprise Fund, 561 U.S. at 502. Because adjudication is the sole mechanism by which the USDA can execute statutes like the Horse Protection Act, see 15 U.S.C. § 1825(b)(1), an ALJ’s double layer of independence deprives the President of any effective control over enforcement of such statutes. The two layers insulating Agriculture ALJs from removal are materially identical to the two layers that protected members of the PCAOB — an ALJ may be removed only for cause by a Board whose members may be removed only for cause. This is an unconstitutional infringement of the President’s executive power.

Sep. Op. at 24. Since petitioners had only challenged the constitutionality of two layers of removal protection, Judge Rao would have struck the layer of review by the MSPB, thereby leaving “one layer of for-cause protection — the Secretary alone would be responsible for determining whether there is good cause to remove an ALJ.” Id. at 37.

Unless Fleming is subject to further proceedings in the D.C. Circuit through panel reconsideration or en banc consideration (which divided panel opinions sometimes precipitate), the two-layer removal protection issue will presumably be raised by petitioners in proceedings before the agency. It seems unlikely than an ALJ or the Judicial Officer will declare themselves unconstitutional, so it would appear that (unless the cases end through settlement) the constitutionality of the two-layer tenure protection will find its way back to the D.C. Circuit. Given the wide variety of USDA regulatory matters that go through an ALJ hearing with review by the Judicial Officer, this is a significant issue for regulated parties.




The Evolution of the USDA’s Horse Protection Operating Plans: A Timeline of Negotiations and Challenges

**The Evolution of the USDA’s Horse Protection Operating Plans: A Timeline of Negotiations and Challenges**

The history of the USDA’s Horse Protection Operating Plans reveals a complex and often contentious negotiation process between the government and various Horse Industry Organizations (HIOs). From the initial draft of the 2000 Operating Plan to the eventual implementation of the 2001-2003 plan, this timeline highlights key developments, disputes, and resolutions that have shaped the enforcement of the Horse Protection Act (HPA).

### **1999: The Foundation is Laid**
In November 1999, the USDA released its first draft of the 2000 Operating Plan. However, resistance from HIOs quickly surfaced. On November 14, the National Horse Show Commission (NHSC) identified 50 major contentions with the draft and opted to maintain the 1999 plan. Subsequent meetings between the USDA and HIO representatives failed to bridge significant gaps, particularly regarding changes in regulatory approaches. By December, the USDA issued a revised draft incorporating some feedback, but HIOs remained divided over its adoption.

### **2000: A Year of Stalemates and Adjustments**
The year 2000 began with discord. The NHSC and several other HIOs refused to sign the new plan, citing concerns over changes in enforcement methods, such as relying solely on palpation to detect soreness in horses. USDA Deputy Administrator Dr. Ron DeHaven expressed disappointment but affirmed that USDA personnel would enforce the HPA at non-compliant events.

Throughout the year, negotiations continued in fits and starts. Multiple meetings, letters, and revisions failed to yield consensus. In March, DeHaven introduced an alternative plan, “2000-B,” identical to the 1999 plan but with added endnotes. However, these endnotes sparked further objections from HIOs, who argued they altered the plan’s interpretation and implementation.

By mid-year, congressional representatives became involved, with several senators and congressmen urging the USDA to revert to the 1999 plan’s framework. Despite these interventions, disagreements persisted. The USDA extended deadlines for HIOs to sign either version of the plan and made concessions on contentious endnotes in response to industry feedback. By July, most HIOs had signed onto either the 2000 or 2000-B plans, though NHSC and Western International continued to resist.

### **Towards a Multi-Year Plan**
In October 2000, NHSC proposed a five-year operating plan modeled on the 1999 version with minor revisions. The USDA responded by scheduling a meeting for November 28 to discuss a multi-year plan for 2001 and beyond. At this meeting, DeHaven acknowledged divergent views among HIOs but expressed optimism about reaching an agreement for a unified operating plan.

By December, the USDA circulated a draft of the 2001-2003 Operating Plan. DeHaven described it as a significant improvement addressing industry concerns without compromising enforcement goals. Early feedback from NHSC representatives suggested cautious optimism about its provisions.

### **2001: Legal Challenges and Final Agreements**
In January 2001, progress was disrupted by a lawsuit from the American Horse Protection Association (AHPA). The AHPA argued that delegating enforcement authority to HIOs violated the HPA. A motion for a temporary restraining order to halt implementation of the new plan was denied, allowing negotiations to continue.

By February, several HIOs, including the Spotted Saddle Horse Breeders’ and Exhibitors’ Association (SSHBEA) and Missouri Fox Trotters, signed the 2001-2003 plan. Meanwhile, legal proceedings continued as both sides filed motions and rebuttals regarding the AHPA’s lawsuit.

Amidst this legal backdrop, congressional representatives from districts with horse shows advocated for clarity and fairness in enforcement plans. Their letters to USDA Secretary Ann Veneman underscored the importance of balancing regulatory oversight with industry needs.

In April 2001, a breakthrough occurred when NHSC chief negotiator Craig Evans signed the 2001-2003 Operating Plan alongside leaders from three other HIOs. A letter of clarification addressed lingering concerns, paving the way for broader acceptance of the plan.

### **Conclusion**
The evolution of the USDA’s Horse Protection Operating Plans underscores the challenges of balancing government oversight with industry cooperation. While each iteration of the plan brought incremental improvements, it also highlighted persistent tensions over enforcement methods and interpretations of regulatory authority. The eventual adoption of the 2001-2003 plan marked a significant step forward, setting a foundation for future multi-year agreements aimed at protecting horses while addressing industry concerns.

This timeline serves as a testament to the complexities of regulatory policy-making in industries where differing priorities must be reconciled for progress to occur.