USADA Unable to Reach Deal With HISA Authority

The United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), for years a vocal proponent of federal legislation to bring the sport under a single governing entity, announced in a press release Thursday morning that it has been unable to reach an agreement to become the enforcement agency for the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, the broad non-profit umbrella established by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act.

“After months of negotiations, we have been unable to enter an agreement in line with the requirements of the Act, and one which would have given us a reasonable chance to put in place a credible and effective program.  While we are obviously saddened by the outcome at this stage, we tried our absolute best to find a way forward but without success,” wrote Travis Tygart, USADA CEO, in a statement.

In a separate statement Thursday, the Authority confirmed the news. “As mandated by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act of 2020, USADA and HISA had been engaged in good faith negotiations but were unable to reach final terms,” the Authority wrote.

With the act scheduled to go into effect July 1 next year–provided it survives legal challenges in the interim–this announcement throws into disarray a crucial component of HISA.

That's because, with only six months left on the clock, the million-dollar question now is: What entity or entities will be responsible for overseeing HISA's laboratory accreditation, drug testing and enforcement program?

The law dictates that if USADA is not the contracted enforcement agency, the Authority must enter into an agreement “with an entity that is nationally recognized as being a medication regulation agency equal in qualification” to USADA.

In Thursday's statement, the Authority wrote that it is “evaluating options for engagement with other leading independent enforcement agencies.”

Furthermore, there will be a temporary delay in submission of the Anti-Doping and Medication Control draft rules to the FTC until a “new independent agency” can be identified and an agreement nailed down.

“This will allow HISA and another independent enforcement agency to reach an agreement and build on the progress that has been made to-date with USADA. HISA anticipates this process will permit the full implementation of the final ADMC rules in early 2023.”

According to the Authority, the draft Racetrack Safety regulations that were submitted to the FTC earlier this month will be implemented on July 1 next year, following the requisite review, public comment and education periods.

For many, this announcement will come as a bolt out of the blue.

Indeed, A little more than two weeks ago at the latest Race Track Industry Symposium at Tucson, Charles Scheeler, chairman of the Authority, unveiled a key development for what was to be the working mechanics of HISA's drug testing program.

According to Scheeler, individual states were going to continue conducting race-day testing and sample collection come July 1 next year. At the same time, USADA would manage the out-of-competition (OOC) testing program.

However, when the 2023 season rolls around, USADA was expected to assume responsibility for both race-day and OOC testing. That arrangement is now obviously defunct.

“While we desperately tried to reach an agreement to implement the program, without compromising our values, we have always said the passing of the legislation and the finalization of uniform, robust rules are huge victories for the horses and the equine industry,” Tygart wrote, in Thursday's statement.

“We are honored to have been involved with these efforts to restore the integrity of thoroughbred horse racing. Though we are unsure what the future holds for USADA–if any–in this effort, we have offered to assist the Authority and others in the industry to ensure that the sport gets the program it needs and that the horses deserve,” Tygart added.

In a statement Thursday, Scheeler said “We are deeply grateful for USADA's hard work, expertise and leadership in working with HISA's Anti-Doping and Medication Committee to develop comprehensive draft rules in a remarkably short period of time.”

NHBA President Eric Hamelback released the following statement, “The National HBPA continues to stand steadfast behind our belief that the HISA Act is an unconstitutional delegation of authority to a private organization. With that said, after the events announced today we hope members of the Authority take into strong consideration partnering with an enforcement agency that understands the nuances of the horse-racing industry and recognizes the significant positive strides this industry has made in both safety and integrity. Now would be a perfect opportunity for the Authority to mesh the safety regulations that have been put forth with the best of the model rules currently established throughout the United States.”

The TDN requested in-person interviews with both Tygart and someone from the Authority about the reasons underpinning Thursday's announcement, and where HISA stands now. These requests remain pending.

In the meantime, the news leaves dangling many key questions pertaining to the practical implementation of HISA. Among them are the following:

1 – Realistically, what entity or entities could step into the role of the enforcement agency?

Could a group like the United States Equestrian Federation pick up the reins? Or is there still a place for USADA to jump into the saddle?

2 – The issue of cost has been an albatross hanging around the neck of HISA from the start.

And so, when it comes to selecting any enforcement agency moving forward, is there a viable, affordable option for the industry that can still meet HISA's statutory needs?

3 – USADA has already put together and published several key materials outlining things like the prohibited substance list, the results management process, sanctions, and the equine sample collection procedure.

But how much of these materials is proprietary, meaning, the Authority would be forced back to the drawing board?

4 – Drugs are broken into two broad categories. Primary substances are those prohibited at all times. Secondary substances–like therapeutic medications–are prohibited just on race-day.

USADA's system was expected to do away with the current Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI)'s alphanumeric classification system for regulated drugs–class 1 through 5, and A through D.

Will the primary and secondary substances lists–the latter USADA hadn't publicly released–still be adopted as part of HISA's anti-doping and medication control rules program?

Or could we see a scenario where the ARCI's model rules remain in place? This last question leads onto the next.

5 – Could today's news facilitate a long-term expanded role for the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC) under HISA, considering the agency already performs several key tasks under the Act's anti-doping and medication program?

For one, laboratories currently accredited by the RMTC were expected to be given interim accreditation for the last six months of 2022 as it was.

Furthermore, the ARCI's model rules are built upon the RMTC's scientific groundwork.

6 – As per USADA's results management program, a “National Steward Panel” would be responsible for hearing secondary substance violations, while “Impartial arbitrators” would hear those for primary substance violations.

This system was warmly received within the industry as an important break from the status quo.

But without USADA at the helm–and currently no firm idea as to who the enforcement agency will be–what is the likelihood these panels will be in place even by the start of 2023?

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Baffert Attorneys: ‘It Does Not Serve The Integrity Of Horse Racing To Suspend First And Ask Questions Later’

Just five days before a scheduled hearing, attorneys for embattled trainer Bob Baffert filed a 434-page memorandum supporting their attempt to convince the court to overturn the New York Racing Association's ban on Baffert. According to the Thoroughbred Daily News, Baffert's attorneys allege that NYRA has “vindictively” targeted the trainer utilizing “hypocrisy” and “backdoor” tactics. The filing also zeroes in on two legal arguments: that the ban violates the trainer's right to due process, and that NYRA has no authority to issue a ban.

“Nowhere in NYRA's Response is there any contention that Baffert has violated any New York statute or racing rule,” the memo states. “In fact, the opposite is true. Over the course of his 46-year training career, including more than 30 years of racing in New York, Baffert has never even been accused of violating a New York rule and he has never faced discipline from either NYRA or the New York State Gaming Commission [NYSGC].

“Despite his distinguished New York racing career, without even a hint of wrongdoing, NYRA believes it has free rein to unilaterally void his constitutionally protected property rights and ban him from all activity in New York without notice and for an indefinite period of time based solely on unproven allegations of a minor infraction (an overage of an allowable medication) in another jurisdiction.”

Baffert filed suit against NYRA on June 14, nearly a month after the racing association notified the Hall of Fame trainer that he was temporarily banned from racing or stabling at NYRA tracks while the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission conducts its investigation into the post-race drug positive for Baffert-trained Medina Spirit, who crossed the finish line first in the May 1 Kentucky Derby. Baffert is seeking a temporary and permanent injunction against the ban.

As defendant in the case, NYRA filed a memorandum of law on June 30 in opposition to Baffert's motion for preliminary injunction. The Jockey Club filed a brief on that same date as amicus curiae, or friend of the court, claiming that its role as keeper of the Stud Book gives it a “unique interest in ensuring that when Thoroughbreds enter the breeding shed (where they determine the future of the breed through progeny), they do so with records uninfluenced by the effects of medication.”

Both those court filings struck the same note, countering Baffert's argument that he will suffer irreparable harm as a result of his ban from Belmont Park and the upcoming high-profile meeting at Saratoga.

In response, the July 7 memo from Baffert's attorneys argues: “There is no compensating for the missed opportunity to participate in prestigious races that define the success of a trainer's career and garner goodwill with clients. NYRA's argument that Baffert cannot prove irreparable harm because he can still race in other states is missing the mark. First, there is no meet more prestigious than Saratoga and the gravitas and economic benefit that come from New York racing cannot be overstated. (…) Baffert's runners in New York win almost three times the amount that they do outside New York. This demonstrates the importance of NYRA racing to Baffert despite the fact that he races in other jurisdictions.”

NYRA's June 30 memo contends that the decision to ban Baffert “was based on probable cause that plaintiff's actions warranted suspension and was necessary to protect the safety of the racehorses and their riders, and required to ensure the integrity of the sport.”

Baffert's attorneys insist that NYRA acting on behalf of the sport's integrity is a “false narrative.”

“The fact NYRA routinely allows onto its tracks trainers who have actually been found to have broken New York's rules of racing completely shatters that false narrative,” their July 7 memo states. “NYRA smears Baffert with allegations about other positive tests, without providing the critical context of those, including that they involved minor overages of permitted substances, none of which merited a suspension and some of which, Baffert was, for all practical purposes, vindicated. … It does not serve the 'integrity' of horse racing to suspend first and ask questions later.”

A hearing on the motion for injunctive relief is scheduled for July 12.

Read more at the Thoroughbred Daily News.

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles, listed in order from most recent to the original story:

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Certificate Program To Assist Vets, Local Authorities During Disasters

Veterinarians rely heavily on first responders during national disasters, where hundreds or thousands of animals can be impacted. There is no training offered to vets for emergency planning or response at the local level; the vets often must rely solely on emergency management, extension agents and animal control officers to put a plan of action in place

Vets who volunteer as part of a local or regional disaster response team are often are frustrated with their inability to help immediately upon arrival. To streamline the process and build on the American Veterinary Medical Association's (AVMA) legacy in disaster relief, a certificate program for veterinary first responders is being created.

The American Veterinary Medical Foundation will provide $80,000 in funding for the program. The AVMA Committee on Disaster and Emergency Issues (CDEI) will identify competencies every vet responder should have. From there, organizations, including the AVMA and veterinary schools, can develop new or modify existing courses to satisfy one or more of the core competencies required for certificate completion.

The program will be overseen by Dr. Warren J. Hess, an assistant director in the AVMA Division of Animal and Public Health, who also serves as the AVMA's disaster coordinator. Hess noted that some vet schools are already providing disaster response training.

The program is expected to be fully operational by Spring 2022. Once a veterinarian or vet student completes courses that meet all core competencies, they will be issued the Basic Veterinary Responder Certificate. This certificate will reassure state and local agencies that the vets providing assistance at the scene of a disaster have the education and training required to work well within the response network.

Read more at AVMA.

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