Pandemic Affects Visas, Limiting H-2B Workers

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — George Weaver feels it. So do Chad Brown, Todd Pletcher and Shug McGaughey. Among the many new issues that Thoroughbred trainers across the country must contend with during the 2020 pandemic is a shortage of skilled staff.

In recent years, it has become more difficult for horsemen to secure all the H-2B visas that they desire to legally bring foreign nationals into the country as guest workers. The arrival of COVID-19 in late winter closed U.S. consulates, compounding the problems, preventing visa holders from getting their entry documents from the State Department. On June 22, President Donald Trump signed an executive order suspending the visa program through December, a move designed to help the tens of millions of unemployed Americans find jobs.

“It is a problem,” said McGaughey, who is missing some of his hotwalkers and could use another exercise rider. “The bad part about it is that Trump, or the government, just does not realize that these are jobs that American people refuse.”

That’s the rub. One of the key provisions of the H-2B visa program is that the jobs must first be offered to Americans before foreign residents can be hired. Trainers say they are always interested in hiring U.S.-based employees for the positions, primarily grooms and hotwalkers.

“The people that are needed, nobody wants to do this work,” Weaver said. “It’s not even about the money, nobody wants to wake up at 3:30, 4:00 in the morning every single morning or even six mornings a week. They don’t want to do it.”

Immigration attorney Will Velie of Norman, Oklahoma, is an expert whose Horseman Labor Solutions company has been helping trainers staff their stables with guest workers for 15 years. Velie estimated that approximately 1,500 people come into U.S., primarily from Mexico and Central American countries to work in the Thoroughbred racing industry. He said it costs trainers between $1,500 and $2,000 per worker in fees and legal expenses. In addition, trainers must pay for travel back and forth to the employees’s home countries and other costs.

“They would not do this if they didn’t have to,” Velie said. “The only reason they are doing this is because they don’t have the people to do the work anymore.”

Velie said the pandemic, which led to border closings and the pause on the admission of people who do already had been approved for visas, has made a tough situation worse.

“It’s particularly bad this year,” he said. “It’s always bad. It’s been bad for a long time. So you’ve got this confluence of factors that make it to where it is very difficult to find enough workers on the backside of the track, even with 25 million unemployed people.”

Weaver said none of the dozen or so internationals he had planned for are with him this summer at Saratoga Race Course. His exercise riders are helping out with hotwalking and he said that some of his grooms have to deal with six or seven horses every day, rather than the norm of four or five.

Like the other trainers, Weaver said his stable is getting by, but he is frustrated by how the situation played out despite doing the proper planning.

“It cost a lot of money, and when you pay the lawyer and you pay the stuff and you don’t get your people, it’s like you just [wasted] a bunch of money and you don’t have your help,” he said.

Pletcher’s stable has been hit hard. He said that none of his 35 guest workers was able to come into the country before the program was closed.

“It has affected everyone,” he said. “We have a large number of visa employees that were approved but have not been allowed to come over. We’ve had to have our staff pull off some overtime, put in extra hours and extra work. Yeah, it has been a hardship for a lot of people. This would be our peak time of the year, so we would have over 100 employees. We have similar numbers, in some cases less-experienced.”

Pletcher nodded at the suggestion that some of his staff is receiving on-the-job training.

“Pretty much,” he said. “At the same time you want new people coming into the business and learning. A lot of our visa workers have been with us for a long time, know the system and are skilled professionals.”

Eric Hamelback, the CEO of the National Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association, said that the jobs Pletcher and the other trainers must fill might seem to the casual observer to be low-level duties easy for most people to handle.

“It is a skilled labor. Yes, it’s hard work. It is agricultural,” he said. “But it’s skilled when you are dealing with animals, whether they are a multi-million dollar horse or one that is a $5,000 claimer. They can kill you in a heartbeat and it takes a certain strength and skill to work in this field. You can’t just grab someone off the street and expect them to be able to hotwalk, much less groom.”

Hamelback said that his organization, which represents nearly 30,000 trainers and owners, is working with the National Horse Council and the National Thoroughbred Racing Association to build congressional insight and support for changes to help the industry with the visa program.

Every year, the Thoroughbred industry is vying for a share of the 66,000 H-2B visas that are allotted. During the year, the White House may add more visas to the pool. The demand is intense: 100,000 applications for the 33,000 H-2B visas available in the first round for 2020.

“This is a big topic and it is a lot of work,” Hamelback said.

Much like Pletcher, Brown has a very large operation and relies on foreign workers to fill some of his staff positions.

“It’s been challenging,” he said. “Thankfully, we have some of our workers who have been able to successfully come in before some stuff got shut down. Not all of them. I know some other trainers that are not in a good spot. It has really affected us. It has caused us to really change the management of our stable, such as how many we are able to have in New York.”

Brown continued, “Thankfully, our team has all pulled together and everyone has picked up the slack. Our business is no different than a lot of other businesses, probably, just trying to get through this pandemic, knowing that there is probably light at the end of the tunnel, that it’s not going to be this way forever. Keeping that mindset. Getting through each day the best we can.”

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Guarana Has Sights On Fourth Grade 1 In ‘Win And You’re In’ Ballerina At Saratoga

Following a gritty effort to win the Grade 1 Madison on July 11 at Keeneland, Three Chimneys Farm and Hill n Dale Equine Holdings' Guarana is scheduled to seek a fourth career Grade 1 triumph in the $300,000 Ballerina presented by NYRA Bets on August 8 at Saratoga.

The seven-furlong event over the main track for older fillies and mares is a Breeders' Cup “Win And You're In” event and provides an automatic entry towards the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint on November 6 at Keeneland.

“I think that's a logical target,” said Doug Cauthen, Vice Chairman of Three Chimneys Farm. “Like with all of them, we let them guide us there but it's definitely on the radar. Hopefully, she can have a good summer and fall.”

Trained by Chad Brown, Guarana boasts a consistent 6-5-1-0 record with three of her victories taking place against Grade 1 competition. In her most recent effort, the Ghostzapper filly commanded the pace early on and was confronted to the outside by Mia Mischief at the top of the stretch who appeared to be in winning contention at the three-sixteenths. Guarana refused to be denied and battled back along the rail to win by a half-length.

“I think she gained even more fans for her courage,” said Cauthen. “It's hard to get passed up and then come back. She was definitely more than game that day. She's really a very special filly and special to everybody here because she's a homebred and she's just brilliant.”

Following a sensational career debut last April at Keeneland, Guarana followed up by defeating Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks winner Serengeti Empress in the Grade 1 Acorn at Belmont Park en route to a two-turn score in the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks at the Spa.

“She's multi-dimensional,” Cauthen said. “She showed that talent last year winning one turn races and winning going two turns at Saratoga as well.”

Guarana is out of the Distorted Humor broodmare Magical World whose dam was the 2005 Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Pleasant Home. Her fourth dam was Grade 1-winner Maplejinsky, who produced Hall of Famer and 1994 Champion Older Female Sky Beauty.

“She's got a lot of the scope and the mare has plenty of scope and quality,” Cauthen said. “She [Magical World] is a Distorted Humor mare that's bigger than most Distorted Humor mares. Just quality and class that runs through the line.”

Fans of Guarana can look forward to seeing her Pioneerof the Nile half-brother debut later in the year. This year, her dam gave birth to a Gun Runner colt and is currently in foal to Quality Road.

“She has a Pioneerof the Nile 2-year-old with Chad that from all hopes is special, but he's got to go out there and prove it. I think he'll be a late summer, early fall horse if all goes well,” Cauthen said.

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Starship Jubilee Upsets Sistercharlie at the Spa

What Starship Jubilee (Indy Wind) may have ‘lacked’ in class entering a clash with champion Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}) in Saturday’s GII Ballston Spa S. at Saratoga was potentially mitigated by the fact that she was always going to hold a tactical advantage–positionally–given the likely shape of the race. When the dust had settled after 8 1/2 furlongs, the blue-collar Florida-bred took full advantage to cause a minor upset, as Sistercharlie could only finish a one-paced third.

While Thais (Fr) (Rio de la Plata) parlayed pacemaker duties–bar the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf, from which she was scratched–for Sistercharlie into a couple of Grade I placings over the past couple of seasons, the new ‘rabbit’ was the commonly owned North Broadway (Quality Road). The latter was ridden for speed by Tyler Gaffalione and opened up double digits down the backstretch, but allowed to bowl along by her lonesome, she set only sedate fractions. For her part, Starship Jubilee tossed her head about passing under the wire for the first time, ultimately coalescing and settling third, with Sistercharlie watching her every move just behind her. The swoopers began to whittle away at the deficit rounding the second turn, but while Sistercharlie was first to get going, Starship Jubilee countered with a quick turn of foot of her owne and ranged up three wide looking dangerous off the home corner. Starship Jubilee hooked up with Call Me Love (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) about a furlong from the line and hung for a few strides in the waning stages, but edged clear to score.

Third, beaten a half-length by the Brown-trained and Stephanie Brant-owned Significant Form (Creative Cause), in this event last year, Starship Jubilee earned a breakthrough Grade I in the E.P. Taylor S., but was defeated at 1-2 over ground softer than she prefers in the GIII Cardinal S. at Churchill in November. She was perfect in three Florida starts over the winter, taking the Sunshine Millions Filly & Mare Turf in January, the GIII Suwannee River S. the following month and Tampa’s GIII Hillsborough S. when last spotted Mar. 7.

Pedigree Notes:

Canada’s reigning Horse of the Year, Starship Jubilee is one of eight winners from as many to race from her dam, a daughter of the New York-based Perfect Arc, trained by Angel Penna Jr. to victory in the 1995 GI QE II Challenge Cup at Keeneland and a trio of graded events on this circuit, including Saratoga’s GII Diana H. Third dam Podeica was victorious in the G1 Polla de Potrancas in her native Argentina. Also the dam of the MSP Starship Nala, Perfectly Wild is also represented by the 3-year-old Allegedly Perfect (Kantharos), a 4 1/2-length maiden winner on the Gulfstream main track this past May and more recently of an allowance/optional claimer sprinting on the turf. Perfectly Wild was bred to Malibu Moon in each of the last two seasons.

Saturday, Saratoga
BALLSTON SPA S.-GII, $194,000, Saratoga, 7-25, 4yo/up, f/m, 1 1/16mT, 1:41.76, fm.
1–STARSHIP JUBILEE, 122, m, 7, by Indy Wind
                1st Dam: Perfectly Wild, by Forest Wildcat
                2nd Dam: Perfect Arc, by Brown Arc
                3rd Dam: Podeica (Arg), by Petronisi (GB)
($6,500 Ylg ’14 OBSAUG; $34,000 RNA 2yo ’15 OBSAPR;
$425,000 RNA 5yo ’18 KEENOV). O-Blue Heaven Farm;
B-William P. Sorren (FL); T-Kevin Attard; J-Javier Castellano.
$110,000. Lifetime Record: HOY & 3x Ch. Turf Female &
GISW-Can, 36-18-5-3, $1,608,667. *1/2 to Starship Nala (Capo
Bastone), MSP, $244,300. Werk Nick Rating: A++. Click for the
   eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Call Me Love (GB), 122, f, 4, Sea The Stars (Ire)–Fresnay (GB),
by Rainbow Quest. (82,000gns Ylg ’17 TATOCT). O-R Unicorn
Stable; B-Grundy Bloodstock S R L (GB); T-Christophe Clement.
$40,000.
3–Sistercharlie (Ire), 122, m, 6, Myboycharlie (Ire)–Starlet’s
Sister (Ire), by Galileo (Ire). (€12,000 Ylg ’15 AR15). O-Peter M.
Brant; B-Ecurie Des Monceaux (IRE); T-Chad Brown. $24,000.
Margins: NK, 1 1/4, 5. Odds: 3.10, 4.40, 0.40.
Also Ran: Bramble Queen, North Broadway. Scratched: Another Broad. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the TJCIS.com PPs or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Halladay Faces Five In Bernard Baruch

Riding a two-race winning streak, Harrell Ventures’ Halladay (War Front) will try to take it to the next level in Sunday’s GII Bernard Baruch S. at Saratoga. Victorious in Gulfstream’s Tropical Park Derby last December, the grey finished fourth–beaten two lengths–in the GIIII Tampa Bay S. Feb. 8 before returning with a three-length score in a one-mile Gulfstream optional claimer Apr. 4. Most recently, Halladay went gate-to-wire over subsequent GI United Nations winner Aquaphobia (Giant’s Causeway) and stablemate Social Paranoia (Street Boss), who took the GIII Poker S. at Belmont Park two starts later.

“So far, the turf course has not been kind to horses close to the pace,” said trainer Pletcher, who won the Baruch in 2012 with Dominus. “That’s really my only concern. The horse is training super and we’re excited about Sunday. He’s in great form and seems to be steadily improving. Obviously, he took to the turf at Gulfstream quite well so I’m hoping that he can apply that to this turf course.”

Jockey Luis Saez was aboard for Halladay’s two latest winning efforts and retains the mount from post six.

Trainer Chad Brown is represented by a pair of contenders in the 8 1/2 furlong test–the lightly-raced Good Governance (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and graded-stakes winner Olympico (Fr) (Rajsaman {Fr}). Campaigned by Seth Klarman’s Klaravich Stables, Good Governance broke his maiden last August over the Spa’s inner turf before finishing a close-up second in the GIII Saranac S. Benched for the remainder of the season, the English-bred registered a 3 3/4-length win in a Belmont allowance June 26.

“He’s lightly raced, but he’s very talented,” said Brown. “Hopefully he’s up to the challenge. He has a nice race under his belt and he looks good.”

The bay’s regular pilot, Irad Ortiz, Jr., reuintes with the 4-year-old and will attempt to collect his third Bernard Baruch triumph.

Stablemate Olympico will attempt to record his first win since lighting up the tote board at 18-1 in his North American debut in last year’s GII Fort Marcy S. at Belmont Park. Owned by Michael Dubb, Madaket Stables and Wonder Stables, the 5-year-old finished fifth in this race one year ago before finishing runner-up in the GII Knickerbocker S. over the inner turf at Belmont Oct. 14.

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