Proposed Bill Would Gut Flow of Slot Money to NY Racing

Backed by a number of animal rights groups, two New York state lawmakers have introduced a bill that would end payments made to the state's racing and breeding industries from slot machine or video lottery terminal (VLT) revenue.

According to a press release issued Wednesday by the animal rights group NYCLASS, the bill would cancel out the $230-million payment made annually to horse racing and breeding and will redirect the money to “help New York's taxpayers, schools, workers and other social programs.”

NYCLASS has led the effort to ban carriage horses in New York City.

The legislation is sponsored by Linda Rosenthal in the Assembly and Zellnor Myrie in the Senate. Both are Democrats representing New York City. According to NYCLASS, it has the backing of, among others, PETA, Horseracing Wrongs, the New York State Humane Association and the Worker Justice Center of New York. NYCLASS calls the bill something that “counters decades of irresponsible waste” and will “end corporate welfare for horse racing–including millionaires and billionaires.”

“It's time we put an end to multimillion dollar taxpayer-funded subsidies that prop up a dying industry,” the press release quoted Rosenthal as saying. “The industry pockets the money to enhance purses and often abuses and neglects the horses in its care, while workers toil at low-wage jobs. We must stop subsidizing this cruel business and instead reinvest the funds where they're needed most – in public education, our human services sector, community redevelopment and wage theft prevention. My legislation is a statement of New York's evolving values, and I look forward to working with State Senator Myrie and the diverse and growing coalition of advocates to see it become law.”

The consensus among industry stakeholders Wednesday was that the bill had little chance of becoming law, but many were alarmed, nonetheless.

“This would have a disastrous effect, especially on the incentives and the momentum that the New Yor- bred program and our racing and purses have had overall,” said Najja Thompson, the executive director of the New York Thoroughbred Breeders.

About $60 million, or 37.5% of all purse money paid out at the NYRA tracks, comes from VLT revenue. The percentage is much higher at Finger Lakes and at the state's many harness tracks.

The New York Racing Association was quick to denounce the effort Wednesday while labeling advocates of the bill as extremists.

“NYRA will vigorously oppose this legislation in order to protect jobs for working families, preserve the horse racing economy and ensure the sport's success now and in the future,” NYRA spokesman Pat McKenna said in a statement. “Racing support payments are not subsidies. The payments from VLT revenues are made to the thoroughbred industry in part because NYRA transferred land and other intellectual property to the state in 2008, and has acted as the steward of the properties in the years since. The VLT payments are compensation for that transaction rather than subsidies. These payments further the sport's ability to serve as an economic engine–particularly in support of the tourism and hospitality industries, which have suffered significantly due to the COVID crisis.

“NYRA looks forward to the opportunity to engage New Yorkers and lawmakers in a real conversation about the massive industry connected to horse racing throughout the state. This is precisely why NYRA joined We Are NY Racing, the diverse coalition launched in September in support of horse racing.

“Organizations like NYCLASS, PETA and Horseracing Wrongs have long been philosophically opposed to horse racing and make no secret of their desire to end the sport,” he said. “This extreme agenda would deprive working families of jobs and opportunity and would negatively impact union and hourly workers at the worst possible time. Rather than a rational public policy disagreement, these groups are only interested in how best to damage horse racing to further their own political agenda. These groups are completely out of touch with the concerns of working families here in New York, and they cannot be trusted.”

Thompson, whose group is part of the We are NY Racing Coalition, said its incumbent on everyone in the industry to educate lawmakers about the positive economic impact of the sport.

“We have to make sure we educate lawmakers and the public and let them know that these are not subsidies,” he said. “They are payments made for agreements regarding intellectual property and the transfer of land. We need to continue to stress the economic impact that horse racing provides, the jobs, the land preservation, especially from breeding farms. That is the best way to counteract these fringe groups and legislation such as this that wants to do irreparable harm to our industry.”

The post Proposed Bill Would Gut Flow of Slot Money to NY Racing appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Half To Aesop’s Fables Set For Bow

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Today's Observations features a sister a Group 1-winning filly.

12.31 Fontainebleau, Mdn, €27,000, 2yo, f, 7fT
Godolphin's Andre Fabre trainee AMIRAVATI (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}) is a homebred half-sister to G1 Prix Jean Prat hero Aesop's Fables (Distorted Humor). She encounters six opponents in this low-key unveiling, headed by Berend van Dalfsen's once-raced Roselyne (Fr) (Dariyan {Fr}), who is a homebred half-sister to G1 Grosser Dallmayr-Preis victor Danceteria (Fr) (Redoute's Choice {Aus}), from the Mauricio Delcher Sanchez stable.

The post Half To Aesop’s Fables Set For Bow appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘He’ll Always Be Special To Us’: Russell Mulling Next Start For First Graded Winner Wondrwherecraigis

Coming off the first graded-stakes win for himself and his trainer, Michael Dubb, The Elkstone Group, Madaket Stables and Michael Caruso's Wondrwherecraigis is enjoying some down time while the connections mull his next race.

The 4-year-old Munnings gelding was a front-running winner of the seven-furlong Bold Ruler (G3) Oct. 31 at Belmont Park, his second career stakes victory and first in graded company from 10 starts.

Based at Laurel Park with trainer Brittany Russell, Wondrwherecraigis' triumph came seven weeks following his disqualification to second after finishing first in the Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G3) over his home track. It was also one day before Russell gave birth to a son, Rye, her second child with husband and jockey Sheldon Russell. They are also parents to 2-year-old daughter, Edy.

“I was disappointed not to be there, but, hey, we had another big thing going on,” Brittany Russell joked. “It was huge. It was so disappointing for him and the ownership group and everyone to see him disqualified that day. But, he came back and he showed that he is a graded-stakes winner.

“'Craig' is doing awesome. He hasn't missed a beat,” she added. “He thinks he's King Kong.”

Russell said they have yet to settle on a target race for Wondrwherecraigis. Among the options are $100,000 Dave's Friend, part of the Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championship (MATCH) Series, Dec. 26 at Laurel and the Toboggan (G3) Jan. 29 at Aqueduct. Both races are contested at seven furlongs.

“We're just sort of trying to give him some time now. I wouldn't say we're set on anything. There's a race in New York in January. There's the MATCH Series race at the end of December. Nothing's really set in stone,” Russell said.

“He'll get this next month. I just sort of backed off of him since he ran and we'll kind of start gearing him back up and let him tell us,” she added. “You have some ideas and goals in the back of your mind, but he doesn't owe us anything. If we keep him home, great. If we decide to take him somewhere else, that's cool, too.”

Russell credited her New York-based assistant, Amanda Olds, with playing a large part in Wondrwherecraigis' success. In addition to the Bold Ruler, his other stakes win came in mid-August in the Tale of the Cat at Saratoga.

“It's nice for us to be able to send him up and not worry about anything. There's no worry shipping him when you have someone like that to travel with,” Russell said. “When he was up at Saratoga, after he won he stayed with her for a while up there and, obviously, it was the right move. She did a great job with him. It's all the moving parts. We're lucky to have the team we have.”

Wondrwherecraigis owns six wins, one second and one third with $347,640 in purse earnings from 10 starts, making a successful debut last March at Laurel just before racing was paused amid the coronavirus pandemic. He has finished first in all five of his races in Maryland, four of them wins prior to the De Francis.

“He's cool. He's one of the original bunch from when we first started along with Hello Beautiful,” Russell said. “'Craig' was, at the end of that year, he was one of the horses that kind of came in and saved me. He just kind of keeps saving me. He got me that graded win, and he's just special. He'll always be special to us.”

The post ‘He’ll Always Be Special To Us’: Russell Mulling Next Start For First Graded Winner Wondrwherecraigis appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Kentucky Derby Museum Vice President Named Chairwoman For Kentucky Travel Industry Association

Kentucky Derby Museum is excited to announce its Vice President, Katie Fussenegger, has been named Chairwoman of the Board for the Kentucky Travel Industry Association. Founded in 1980, KTIA provides Kentucky's tourism industry with advocacy, education, information and business development services. KTIA leads a concerted effort to increase awareness of the vital role that tourism plays in Kentucky's economy. Fussenegger's term begins immediately and runs for one year.

Fussenegger has an impressive track record in the Kentucky Tourism Industry, previously serving as the President & CEO of ShelbyKY Tourism before moving to the Kentucky Derby Museum in February 2020 as Vice President of the nonprofit organization.

She was appointed to the KTIA Board in November 2016, served as Treasurer in 2019 and Vice Chair the past two years, and in 2019, she was honored as KTIA Member of the Year. She has served as the President of Skal International Louisville in both 2020 and 2021, an international travel and tourism group that promotes global tourism. She is also a past president of the Kentucky Association of Convention & Visitors Bureaus. Other recent career highlights include being named a “Way to go Woman!” in the leadership category for Today's Woman, and a Top Woman in Business in 2020 by The Lane Report.

“I am excited to take the reins in this leadership role with the KTIA Board. Kentucky is my home, and my heart is in promoting this great state and all that its tourism and hospitality industries have to offer,” said Fussenegger. “It is tourism's time to make a comeback after being hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic, and I am ready with the leaders on this Board to position our state as a top tourism destination.”

Her role as Vice President at Kentucky Derby Museum began at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and she has been monumental in implementing COVID-19 safety protocols for Museum Staff and Guests. As Vice President, Fussenegger oversees various aspects of daily operations at the Museum, provides leadership oversight, increases revenue for various departments and oversees proper execution of the Museum's overall budget. She's also key in hiring, developing and appraising staff.

Fussenegger has a Bachelor's degree in Communications from the University of Louisville.

The post Kentucky Derby Museum Vice President Named Chairwoman For Kentucky Travel Industry Association appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights