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Protecting Southern California's Wild Burros

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Wild burros gallop out of a corral after being collared with reflective material to make them more visible on highways.
Wild burros gallop out of a corral after being collared with reflective material to make them more visible if they wander onto roadways. | Photo by Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images 

 The head of the Riverside County Department of Animal Services next week will ask the Board of Supervisors to authorize his staff to draft an ordinance that would impose penalties for feeding and otherwise enticing wild burros to come into populated areas, increasing the chances of an accident.

The "Prohibiting the Harassment and Feeding of Undomesticated Burros" proposal will be considered as part of the board's policy agenda Tuesday.

According to Animal Services Director Rob Miller, such an ordinance has become necessary for the safety of the animals and general public.

"Burros generally inhabit the Reche Canyon and Pigeon Pass area (north of Moreno Valley), but are now using roadways and railroad tracks to enter populated areas," Miller wrote in his proposal. "The burros are enticed to move further into more urbanized neighborhoods by increased contact with humans by way of food left on the side of the road, or handed out vehicle windows directly to the animals."

According to the Department of Animal Services, the Riverside County Transportation Commission highlighted the growing problem of burro encounters in December 2015 while running speed tests on the Perris Valley

Line, which expanded commuter rail service from Riverside to the north edge of Menifee.

Officials said burros were wandering over or extremely close to the tracks as Metrolink and RCTC initiated trial runs, requiring authorities to scare the animals away.

Burros have also been crossing roads or crowding along the shoulders of roads, waiting for handouts in recent months, according to the Department of Animal Services.

"In the wild, burros eat mostly grass or vegetation and fear people and vehicles," Miller stated. "However, due to easy access to foods not generally found in the wild, burros' behavior has adapted. Instead of normal grazing, the burros now seek out populated areas, roadways and people in order to obtain the treats provided."

California's Wild Donkeys & Horses

The U.S. government enacted the Wild Free Roaming Horses & Burros Act in 1971 in an effort to control where undomesticated horses and mules go, but that only applies to federal lands, according to county officials.

Miller said the proposed county ordinance would replicate a state Department of Fish & Game regulation that "expressly prohibits the harassment, and feeding, of undomesticated burros."

"Reducing contact between burros and the public results in several positive outcomes, including reducing accidents on roadways and rail lines and encouraging the herds to return to their natural behaviors," he said.

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