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Thursday, May 29, 2025
HomeHorse RescueTitle: Scrutiny Surrounds Above the Stars Equine Rescue Amid Claims of Horse...

Title: Scrutiny Surrounds Above the Stars Equine Rescue Amid Claims of Horse Neglect and Charity Misrepresentation

Stephanie Redlick says she champions saving horses from sale for slaughter through Above the Stars, but few details could be verified.

BRADFORD – We’ve all heard ‘don’t look a gift horse in the mouth,’ but what about when a horse rescue starts asking for gifts?

Earlier this month, Stephanie Redlick reached out to BradfordToday and other Village Media publications, asking for promotion of her “charity” Above the Stars Equine Rescue, which she claimed to have been operating since 2013 and expanded to the Bradford area about six years ago, around the same time she moved to town.

“I rescue horses because it makes a difference,” she said. “I’m a horse lover, so I’ve always loved horses.”

Along with help from her father Sam, Redlick estimates they’ve saved about 150 horses from being sold to slaughter for horse meat, by acquiring them from auctions in both Canada and the U.S., where mostly old horses are sold off after they’re no longer considered useful.

Though many of those horses are in their 20s, Redlick explained they also accept some younger horses which are surrendered to the rescue if people can no longer care for them.

While Above the Stars’ website asks for donations, claims the “charity organization” is “government approved,” and lists their registration number as 764052569RR0001, neither the name nor number return any results in Canada Revenue Agency’s (CRA) online database of qualified charities/donees nor Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada’s business registries.

Redlick said that’s a result of a delay in filing some paperwork, but claimed CRA staff told her she is still able to issue tax receipts for donations.

However, Nina Ioussoupova, a representative of the CRA, said that according to their records Above the Stars is not currently — nor has it previously been — registered as a charity, and only Canadian registered charities and/or qualified donees can issue official donation receipts that qualify for charitable tax credits.

Ioussoupova did not answer if Above the Stars has a valid business registration.

“Given that the organization has never been a registered charity, the disclosure provisions of the (Income Tax) Act prevent us from providing any further information about it,” she said.

The Google listing for Above the Stars is tied to 212 Melbourne Dr. in Bradford, but Redlick said she has recently moved from that location and is in the process of getting the listing changed.

The Facebook page for Above the Stars is listed as only being created in March this year, and Redlick explained that because Facebook’s policies prohibit “the buying, selling, or trading of animals or animal products,” pages such as hers are sometimes flagged and removed.

A person claiming to be a well-known veterinarian emailed BradfordToday to say he cares for the horses at Above the Stars and can confirm it is a legitimate rescue, but did not provide his licence number for verification and voicemail messages left for him by phone were not returned in time for publication.

A representative from another charity that the veterinarian is known to help said the email address used to contact BradfordToday did not match the one the veterinarian normally uses.

Operator maintains position

Despite difficulty verifying the operation, Redlick stood by her efforts, and said the rescue operates at multiple locations in both countries, thanks to local farmers — including some in Bradford — who donate space in stalls or paddocks to house the animals. Redlick also owns a property in Oro-Medonte where she explained horses and people with disabilities are sometimes paired for a sort of mutual therapy.

“It’s awesome,” Redlick said.

At all locations, she noted the animals are provided care and room to play while they’re rehabilitated.

“They’re like huge dogs,” Redlick said. “They’re all different. I’ve never met a horse who has the same personality.”

Once healthy, the horses are adopted out to new homes, according to Redlick, but not before she interviews the potential adopter and reviews their facilities to ensure the horses will have a good life — even requiring a criminal record check just to be safe.

As an added measure, the horses are not permitted to be re-homed, and if an adopter can’t continue to care for them, the animals are to be returned to Above the Stars.

Depending on the condition of the horses when they arrive, Redlick estimated it can take anywhere from one to six months, and cost from $5,000 to $20,000 to rehabilitate them, as supplies for horses are “extremely expensive.”

It also requires patience and perseverance.

“It’s all day every day. I don’t go to sleep until three in the morning,” Redlick said. “It’s a 24/7 job basically.”

Privacy concerns and ongoing investigation

While they’re considering bringing on volunteers to help in future, for now, Redlick said they’re keeping it to just her and her father due to privacy concerns, which is also why they declined BradfordToday’s request to visit or take photos on the properties.

Those concerns stem from an incident on their farm at 248 Line 6 North in Oro-Medonte on Feb. 4, in which Redlick claims people trespassed, broke into a building, stole items and injured one of the horses, leaving it with a “massive stab wound” and leading to more than $12,000 in medical bills.

“It’s absolutely disgusting and stressful that there’s people out there that are ready to tarnish your business, that will come into your barn and stab one of your horses,” she said.

Meanwhile, residents have claimed horses on Redlick’s property are being neglected and left without food or water, but Redlick has denied the allegations, calling them “bogus.”

A representative for the Ministry of the Solicitor General confirmed the province’s Animal Welfare Services — responsible for enforcing the Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act — attended the property on Feb. 5 and are still conducting an active investigation.

"Animal Welfare Services (AWS) was first made aware of this matter on Feb. 4, 2025, and attended the property on Feb. 5," said an emailed statement from AWS.

"Orders were made related to the animals present. Following subsequent visits, which determined non-compliance with the orders, several horses were removed from a second property to which the owner had moved them," noted the statement.

"AWS relocated the horses in order to provide required care. AWS continues to investigate and, as such, cannot provide further comment."

Redlick said she reported the incident to the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), but as they are not investigating, she explained they’ve begun litigation against the group of trespassers.

“We retained a top lawyer in the Toronto area, and he’s taking care of stuff for us and it’s looking very bright,” she said.

For more information about Above the Stars visit its website, email [email protected], or call 613-970-0862.

— With files from Tyler Evans

Stephanie Redlick operates Above the Stars Equine Rescue, claiming to have saved around 150 horses from slaughter since 2013. While she promotes her charity and seeks donations, there are significant concerns regarding its legitimacy. The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has confirmed that Above the Stars is not a registered charity, contradicting Redlick’s assertion that she can issue tax receipts for donations. Additionally, her organization’s online presence raises questions, as its Facebook page was only created recently, and the Google listing is outdated.

Redlick insists that the horses receive proper care and rehabilitation, often requiring substantial financial investment and time. She emphasizes a thorough adoption process to ensure the horses are placed in suitable homes, with strict conditions for their return if necessary. However, allegations of neglect have surfaced, prompting an investigation by the province’s Animal Welfare Services, which has reportedly removed several horses from her care due to non-compliance with welfare orders.

Despite these challenges, Redlick maintains her commitment to the rescue and has begun legal action against individuals she claims trespassed on her property and harmed a horse. She continues to seek support for her operations while navigating ongoing scrutiny and investigations into her practices.

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Title: Colorado Governor Signs Animal Welfare Bills, Featuring Therapy Horse Jewel

Thursday was bill-signing day for animals in Colorado. Gov. Jared Polis signed measures addressing bison, wild horses, and animals threatened during emergencies, such as wildfires.

But the star of the day was Jewel, a 13-year-old American miniature horse who joined in the signing festivities at the CSU Spur at the National Western Stock Show grounds. According to her handler, she’d just had a bath and a good roll in the dirt and was ready for the rest of her day.

Jewel is a therapy horse, one of 14 housed at the Spur as part of its equine therapy program. Clients brush, groom, and handle Jewel for occupational, physical, and psychological therapy.

With Jewel at his side, Polis signed House Bill 25-1283, which continues the state’s efforts to help the Bureau of Land Management with Colorado’s wild horse population. Colorado’s efforts include fertility treatments rather than rounding them up and sending them to Cañon City. In the past, those roundups have led to outbreaks of equine influenza, which in 2022 killed 146 horses at the Cañon City facility.

The bill follows recommendations from a wild horse working group from 2023 and repeals the state-owned, nonprofit Wild Horse Project previously under the Colorado Department of Agriculture. Instead, the ag department will take on a more active role, including hiring eight professional "darters" who will administer contraceptives to wild horses to help reduce the population in the four BLM-controlled herd management areas and other parts of the state.

While the bill identifies gifts, grants, donations, and money from the federal government as the primary funding sources for the program, the General Assembly approved $1.5 million for the project in 2023, and it still has about $500,000 left.

Polis noted he’s been critical of the costly and sometimes inhumane federal roundups in the past. "We know if we have the ability as a state, we can do better" in successfully managing the population and in a less expensive way.

House Majority Leader Monica Duran, D-Wheat Ridge, said, "Wild horses embody the essence of Colorado." She added that HB 1283 represents extensive collaborative work involving diverse interests: ranchers, wild horse advocates, conservation groups, federal agencies, and state departments to address the complex challenge of managing these iconic animals. The bill was co-sponsored by House Assistant Minority Leader Ty Winter, R-Trinidad, and Sens. Janice Marchman, D-Loveland, and Larry Liston, R-Colorado Springs.

Jewel got an invitation to visit the Capitol next year to provide a little therapy for lawmakers. According to her handler, she knows how to ride an elevator.

There is one other issue around the program: the transition in the federal government regarding who manages it. President Donald Trump’s first nominee for head of BLM, Kathleen Sgamma of Denver, withdrew her nomination after a memo surfaced in which she criticized Trump for the Jan. 6, 2021, riots.

Project 2025, a blueprint for Trump’s second term produced by the Heritage Foundation, addressed the wild horse program in a section on the Department of the Interior authored by William Perry Pendley, formerly a partner with Brownstein Farber Hyatt Shreck, LLP.

Pendley was acting BLM director of the Bureau in 2019 but was never confirmed by the U.S. Senate and his nomination was withdrawn a year later.

Pendley wrote of the wild horse program that in 2020, BLM reported to Congress it would expand adoptions and sales of horses gathered from overpopulated herds; increase gathers [captures] and increased capacity for off-range holding facilities and pastures; more effective use of fertility control efforts; and improved research, in concert with the academic and veterinary communities, to identify more effective contraceptive techniques and strategies.

But "all of that will not be enough to solve the problem. Congress must enact laws permitting the BLM to dispose of these animals humanely," Pendley wrote.

According to Polis and Sandra Hagen Solin of American Wild Horse Conservation, Colorado might see this as an opportunity, given the Trump administration’s cuts to funding and programs.

Polis told Colorado Politics on Thursday that he sees an opportunity for the state. The administration is looking for cost savings on roundups and horse boarding, he said. According to Solin, that can cost as much as $60,000 per year per horse.

The governor added that there’s an opportunity to save tens of millions of dollars per year and for BLM to work with states on this. "We are ready and willing to take on responsibility. We can do it more effectively and humanely."

Polis noted he’s talked to Secretary of the Interior Doug Burghum about the issue. "We’re ready to roll up our sleeves, save taxpayers money and be more proactive on management."

Solin told Colorado Politics that Burghum has been a fan of wild horses since his days as governor of North Dakota. The state is home to Theodore Roosevelt National Park and a wild horse herd believed to have descended from the horses of Sitting Bull.

"We actually feel like we have a friend in Burghum," Solin said. She acknowledged the Project 2025 report that indicated horses should be moved to slaughter, which she called "concerning," but said she had not heard that was a direction BLM was going to go. There are opportunities for cost savings in keeping horses on the range, and Burghum will be a protective force.

In a statement, AWHC said the U.S. government is spending over $150 million in taxpayer dollars on inhumane roundups that have led to the suffering and deaths of wild horses and burros, including far too many in Colorado. "The real tax savings come from keeping wild horses on the range instead of rounding them up in the first place."

Polis also signed bills to protect bison, allow residents of publicly financed housing to keep up to two pets instead of one; to prohibit the sale or adoption of animals on streets, highways, outdoors markets or parking lots; and to set up an animal protection fund with donations through income tax filings, to be administered by the ag department and that would help pay for care of pets and livestock during emergencies.

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Title: Healing Through Horses: How Wyoming’s Operation Remount Supports Veterans’ Mental Health


While Memorial Day is a time for remembrance, it can also be a difficult period for many veterans, particularly those struggling with mental health. A program in Wyoming is helping to address those challenges by pairing veterans with wild mustangs in a unique approach to healing.

According to data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2022, veterans are more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD, depression, and anxiety than civilians. Each year, approximately 6,000 veterans die by suicide. At some point in their lives, 7 out of every 100 veterans (or 7%) will experience PTSD, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

In the small town of Jay Em, Wyoming, a nonprofit called Operation Remount Corporation is offering a form of equine therapy that serves not only veterans and first responders but also the mustangs—many of which come from traumatic backgrounds. Karen Alexander, co-founder of Operation Remount, says some mustangs also experience trauma and anxiety, making the program a form of reciprocal healing.

“These are mustangs that went through three adoptions and were not accepted or not adopted,” Alexander said. “When the mustangs first come, they are very afraid of humans. It’s really neat to see when that animal finally says, I can trust you.”

Veteran Sean Walker is one of this year’s participants at Operation Remount. He says joining the program and meeting his horse, nicknamed Spirit, was needed after serving in the military. Walker, who completed two tours in Iraq and one in Bosnia with the Kansas National Guard, says just a few weeks with his horse, Spirit, has already made a significant impact.

“His name is Enduring Spirit Wind,” Walker said. “He’s taught me probably more than I could have possibly taught him.” After retiring from the military, Walker said reintegrating into civilian life was difficult. Like many other veterans, he experienced mental health challenges.

The program recently added a new red cabin to house participants during the six-week course. It was built in honor of Marine Corps Sgt. B.J. Shepperson, who served two deployments and struggled with the transition back to civilian life in Wyoming. Shepperson said his brother B.J. loved horses and would have really appreciated what this program is doing to help other veterans.

“After two deployments and coming back to Wyoming, he had a hard time re-adjusting,” said his brother, Baxter Shepperson.

Program leaders say they’re working to construct more cabins, allowing additional veterans and first responders to stay overnight during the program as they experience the therapeutic bond with a horse. “It’s like when you found a connection that you’ve lost,” Walker said. “It allows you to have that reconnection and Spirit has been that.”

Operation Remount allows the veterans and first responders to keep the wild horse after completing the six-week course. The nonprofit holds sessions in both spring and fall. The team at Operation Remount is now working toward building an indoor facility so they can offer the program throughout the year, even during Wyoming’s harsh winter months.

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