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HARNESS TRACKS OF AMERICA Executive Newsletter

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<strong>HARNESS</strong> <strong>TRACKS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>AMERICA</strong><br />

THIS IS UNBELIEVABLE<br />

The incredible inaction of New Jersey’s governor<br />

and legislature in allowing the state’s once proud<br />

horse racing industry to slide down the slippery<br />

slope -- and help push it there -- took a new turn<br />

yesterday. The Assembly’s Tourism and Wagering<br />

Committee enthusiastically endorsed sports<br />

betting for Atlantic City casinos, despite it being<br />

against federal law. The state’s policy of “anything<br />

the casinos want” continues, as the chairman<br />

of the Assembly’s Budget Committee, Lou<br />

Greenwald, said the federal law banning sports<br />

betting can be challenged as a violation of states’<br />

rights. This one could be headed for the U. S.<br />

Supreme Court, but what happens to racing in<br />

New Jersey before that long process is completed<br />

could be a grim story for a once dominant industry.<br />

The president of the Casino Association of<br />

New Jersey, which at times appears to run the<br />

state, thanked the committee backing sports betting<br />

by saying, “It has been a tough year for our<br />

industry. We appreciate the fact that you’re taking<br />

this effort, the heavy lift that it is, to help the<br />

industry out.” Leon Zimmerman, testifying before<br />

the committee for the Standardbred Breeders<br />

and Owners Association, told members of the<br />

huge impact of casinos on racing in the state, and<br />

said it endangered the livelihood of thousands of<br />

people who are in the horse racing and breeding<br />

business. He noted that a recent study at the state<br />

university at Rutgers found racing contributes<br />

$1.7 billion a year to New Jersey’s economy.<br />

In a strong letter to Gov. Jon Corzine, the director<br />

of Rutgers Equine Science Center, Karyn<br />

Malinowski, joined by the president of the SBOA,<br />

Tom Luchento, and the president of the state’s<br />

thoroughbred horsemen’s association, Dennis<br />

Drazin, told Corzine, “We are not crying wolf,”<br />

and said a real and imminent disaster was<br />

about to happen in the state, including<br />

possible loss of the Hambletonian.<br />

<strong>Executive</strong> <strong>Newsletter</strong><br />

A daily fax and e-mail report on racing and gaming developments in North America and beyond<br />

Stanley F. Bergstein, Editor<br />

January 25, 2008<br />

“If the lowered purse structure remains as reported,”<br />

the letter said, “the Meadowlands will<br />

have to cancel the premier events scheduled at<br />

the track. Races like the Hambletonian and<br />

Breeders’ Crown will need to find a venue outside<br />

of New Jersey. Horsemen could no longer<br />

allow the large expenditure from purse accounts<br />

needed to support these world class events that<br />

bring national attention to our great state. This<br />

is a sobering thought for all involved. We are on<br />

the edge of collapse of the entire horse industry<br />

in New Jersey.”<br />

NO VERNON ACTION, EITHER<br />

This week’s session of the New York Assembly<br />

has ended without action on the tax relief bill,<br />

and the best racing got there was Assemblyman<br />

Bill Magee’s promise that “We’re working on<br />

it,” and the hope that it might be discussed next<br />

week. Yonkers reportedly is unhappy with the<br />

legislation as proposed, and its horsemen continue<br />

their damaging opposition under a leadership<br />

apparently intent on torpedoing the measure.<br />

PASSPORT, BANS IN ONTARIO<br />

Ontario’s racing commission approval of new<br />

measures designed to protect the province’s<br />

horses and horse industry are far reaching.<br />

They include a “horse health passport” that<br />

will require public disclosure of all vaccination<br />

records to new owners; greater limits on commission<br />

approved veterinarian-only administration<br />

of medications except in emergencies; limits<br />

on shock wave therapy; mandated use of safety<br />

reins and safety vests; new guidelines regarding<br />

trainer transfers; new measures on out-of-competition<br />

testing; and perhaps most significant of<br />

all, banning from racing for 90 days of horses<br />

that show positive tests. Commission chairman<br />

Rod Seiling said the new rules are designed to<br />

protect the health of the horse, ensure the safety<br />

of the participant, and reinforce the integrity<br />

of the sport.

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