On September 28, Governor
Andrew Cuomo announced that his office has received the findings and
recommendations of the New York Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety and
that the state will undertake an unprecedented series of reforms to promote
equine safety at New York racetracks.
The Task Force was appointed at the request of the Governor's office following a spate of deaths at Aqueduct Racetrack during its winter meeting.
The Task Force was directed to
review the circumstances involving the deaths, analyze the causes, and
recommend any necessary action to prevent equine breakdowns at NYRA operated
facilities.
The Task Force was also charged
with examining horse claiming rules, veterinary procedures and drug use in
order to promote equine safety.
"New York is committed to placing the health, safety and welfare of the equine athlete as the top priority of horseracing," Governor Cuomo said.
"As we bring
accountability and responsible business practices to horseracing, these
recommendations will be an integral part of a new and improved racing product.
I have requested the Racing and Wagering Board to promptly adopt the changes
identified by the Task Force to create a safety-conscious environment for
racehorses. I sincerely thank the members of the Task Force on Racehorse Health
and Safety for their important work."
The Governor's actions include recommending a complete overhaul of NYRA's veterinary practices, the creation of an Equine Medical Director position within the state's racing regulatory body, strict prohibitions regarding medications, and new rules for claiming races.
Since the Task Force found that
the inability of jockeys to communicate their concerns about the health of
horses established an unacceptably elevated level of risk, the State will
create an anonymous equine safety hotline to enable jockeys to report horse
health concerns without fear of retribution.
Task Force Chairman Scott E. Palmer, VMD , said, "The Task Force has spent countless hours analyzing the circumstances of each equine death at Aqueduct. We found multiple factors that created a 'perfect storm' of conditions that caused these tragic breakdowns. We have produced realistic recommendations that will make a lasting difference in racehorse health and safety. We are proud of this report and thank Governor Cuomo for creating this Task Force."
“The recommendations put forth
by this Task Force are strong and effective responses to the equine fatalities
at Aqueduct. The Board stands ready to incorporate the full report into our
policies and procedures,” noted Racing and Wagering Board Chairman John D.
Sabini.
The Task Force found that while there was no single root cause for the Aqueduct fatalities, a combination of factors likely led to the increased rate of horse deaths.
These factors included:
increased purses in claiming races that incentivized stakeholders to run
substandard horses; the use of corticosteroids that may have limited the
ability of veterinarians to identify pre-existing conditions that disposed
horses to catastrophic injuries; a lack of protocols and inconsistencies in
pre-race inspections and veterinary procedures; and mild weather on a track
designed for harsher winters.
During its comprehensive examination, the Task Force found that NYRA's organizational veterinary structure was inherently conflicted by reporting to an entity (the Racing Office) whose function is inconsistent with deliberate and careful equine risk management practice.
Other structural shortcomings
with NYRA's veterinary practice include: a lack of uniform protocols and
procedures among track veterinarians, a failure to standardize risk factors to
assess racehorses' fitness to run, and no uniformity in veterinary care
recordkeeping or proper use of existing veterinary practice management
software.
The State Racing and Wagering Board and NYRA will be directed to take these actions:
Establish an Office of
the Equine Medical Director to oversee horse safety
Create an independent
veterinary practice structure within NYRA which will put the health of the
horses first and which reporting directly to the chief executive officer of
NYRA
Establish an anonymous
reporting mechanism for jockeys to report health or safety violations without
fear of reprisal
Prohibit Clenbuterol
within 21 days of a race
Prohibit
Methylprednisolone (DepoMedrol®) within 15 days of the date of a race
Prohibiting all other
intra-articular corticosteroids within seven days of a race
Prohibiting all other
systemic corticosteroids within five days of a race
Requiring trainers to
maintain and records of corticosteroid administrations and notify the Stewards
in writing within 48 hours of all intra-articular corticosteroid administrations
Extending the claiming
rule that voids claims in the event a claimed horse dies on the race track to
make a claim voidable within 1 hour of the conclusion of a race if the horse is
vanned off the track
Amending the economic
proportionality claiming rule to allow a purse-to-claim ratio no greater than
1.6-to-1
Requiring horse
claimants be notified within 48 hours of any intra-articular administration of
corticosteroids to the claimed horse in the 30 days prior to the race
Expanding out-of-competition
drug testing to include corticosteroids and clenbuterol
Improving documentation
of findings of fatal injuries, including the development of standard protocols
for handling of horses sustaining fatal injuries
Requiring testing
laboratory accreditation
Formalizing necropsy
procedures
NYRA will also examine the possibility of installing of a synthetic surface on the inner track at Aqueduct.
The members of the Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety are:
Chairman: Dr. Scott E. Palmer, the hospital
director and staff surgeon at the New Jersey Equine Clinic, has served as a
past president of the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP). He
currently serves as Chairman of the AAEP Racing Committee. Palmer has also been
twice named “Veterinarian of the Year” by the New Jersey Association of Equine
Practitioners.
Jerry Bailey, a retired Hall of Fame jockey, is
a seven-time Eclipse champion jockey who has won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness
and Belmont Stakes twice each, as well as five Breeders' Cup Classics. Bailey,
who currently works as a television analyst, served as President of the
Jockeys' Guild.
Alan Foreman, the Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of Thoroughbred Horsemen's Associations, Inc., also serves as Vice
Chairman of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium and as counsel to
many horsemen's and racing industry organizations.
Dr. Mary Scollay, the equine medical director of
the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, previously led a pilot racehorse injury
reporting project that became the Jockey Club's Equine Injury Database.
The report is available here.
The report's executive summary is available here.
Image courtesy of http://www.newcashondemand.com.
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