West Virginia Trims Dates For ’24, Exact Schedules Hinge On Outcome of HISA Legality

Both Charles Town Races and Mountaineer Park got approval Wednesday from the West Virginia Racing Commission (WVRC) to reduce live racing dates in 2024 compared to recent seasons.

The Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) chapters at both tracks supported the diminished schedules based on available purse funds and projected horse populations.

Right now the placeholders are 158 dates for Charles Town and 121 for Mountaineer.

But the exact number of programs will ultimately be contingent on the outcome of several overlapping federal lawsuits that have to do with the legality of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA).

In July of 2022, the states of West Virginia and Louisiana won a preliminary injunction that has kept the HISA rules from being implemented in those two states until their lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of HISA gets decided in full.

Then in September of 2023, the judge handling that case ordered it to be “administratively terminated” until the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals made a ruling in a separate (but related) suit in which the National HBPA is also alleging that HISA is unconstitutional.

Oral arguments in the HBPA vs. HISA case were heard Oct. 4 but no Fifth Circuit decision has been issued yet.

WVRC executive director Joe Moore explained during the Dec. 13 meeting that if HISA were to be deemed legal nationwide and/or the court's injunction barring implementation in West Virginia got lifted, both tracks would need to recalculate how much purse money was available and how many racing dates those funds could cover.

That's because Charles Town and Mountaineer would be subject to HISA assessments for safety oversight and drug testing services that they currently don't pay because of the injunction that grants them an exception.

According to HISA's 2024 budget, West Virginia's assessment for next year is $4,448,269 (Charles Town $3,281,367; Mountaineer $1,166,902).

Moore said that “if HISA were to become effective in West Virginia, I suspect Charles Town and the horsemen would consider reducing their race days by a number to ensure that there were purse monies available after the [HISA] assessments were calculated for them.”

Charles Town's director of racing, Charlie McIntosh, concurred.

“If HISA were to come back into effect, we'd have to sit down and evaluate” funding options, McIntosh said.

Mountaineer gate | Coady Photography

No representative from Mountaineer spoke on the track's behalf during the meeting.

The two tracks handled their dates reduction requests differently. Charles Town asked for and received 158 dates but left the door open to come back to the commission for a further reduction request if necessary.

Mountaineer took the opposite approach, asking for and receiving the commission's approval for two dates contingencies so the track wouldn't have to come back a second time to request another trim if HISA gets legalized in the state.

So the WVRC approved 121 dates for Mountaineer, with Moore explaining that “if feasible and [if West Virginia continues to] remain exempt from HISA, their number of live race days would increase to 128.”

Moore said Mountaineer's season would run Apr. 28-Dec. 4 under the first contingency, with the meet extending through Dec. 11 if the second plan got utilized.

Charles Town's 2024 schedule, according to the track's website, will consist of four- and three-date weeks nearly year-round, with breaks Aug. 25-Sept. 11 and Dec. 15-31.

Charles Town's 158 dates for 2024 continues a downward trend. The track was awarded 164 dates in 2023 and 179 in 2022.

Unless Mountaineer ends up running the bumped-up 128 dates, its 121-date allotment also represents a decrease, from 124 dates in 2023 and 130 dates in 2022.

(All dates cited above are based on dates as originally assigned by the commission, and do not reflect any in-season program losses that might have occurred because of weather cancellations.)

Even in years when the costs of HISA assessments have not been in play, the awarding of race dates in West Virginia has been a somewhat confusing several-step process. A state statute requires Charles Town to apply for 220 programs every year, and Mountaineer is required to apply for 210 dates. But those quotas haven't been reached for quite some time.

What has ended up happening in recent seasons is that after the initial approvals of those mandated 220 and 210 dates every November by the WVRC, both venues have subsequently come back before the commission to ask for reductions that reflect what each track and its HBPA representatives think is a workable schedule.

The dates reduction votes were unanimous Dec. 13, with WVRC chairman Ken Lowe Jr. and commissioner J.B. Akers voting in the affirmative, while commissioner Tony Figaretti was listed as being absent from the meeting because of a travel conflict.

The post West Virginia Trims Dates For ’24, Exact Schedules Hinge On Outcome of HISA Legality appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Charles Town Requests 15 Fewer Dates in ’23

Charles Town Races on Tuesday was approved for a reduction of 15 dates for 2023 compared to its 2022 allotment, with the understanding that the 164-program schedule could be revisited mid-year to include additional dates if finances warrant extra racing.

The awarding of race dates in West Virginia is a somewhat confusing several-step process bound by a state statute that requires Charles Town to apply for 220 programs every year. The state's other Thoroughbred track, Mountaineer Park, is required to apply for 210 dates.

But what has ended up happening in recent seasons is that after the initial approvals of 220 and 210 dates by the West Virginia Racing Commission (WVRC), both venues have subsequently come back before the commission to ask for reductions that reflect what each track and its respective Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) think is a workable schedule based on available purse funds.

At the Nov. 14 WVRC meeting, Mountaineer was granted additional approval to reduce its schedule to 124 dates in 2023, a six-program cutback from the 130 that the track was awarded in 2022.

Also at that Nov. 14 meeting, WVRC executive director Joe Moore noted that Charles Town was approved for 179 programs in 2022.

But at the Dec. 20 meeting, Moore said that Charles Town ended up racing just 173 dates because of cancellations during the 2022 season just completed Dec. 17.

So prior to the 3-0 unanimous vote by commissioners Tuesday, Charles Town's revised 164-date request was framed by Moore as a nine-date reduction based on the actual number of programs.

But as per the 179-date allotment he had previously stated in November, it's a parsing of 15 cards.

“The request comes with the agreement [by] the racetrack and the HBPA that they will meet in July to revisit their live race schedule and their available purse monies to assess whether there is a possibility of adding any days towards the end of the calendar year,” Moore said.

The post Charles Town Requests 15 Fewer Dates in ’23 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Former Charles Town Racing Secretary Lonnie Sowers Passes At Age 82

The Charles Town racing community lost a long time member recently as the track's former Racing Secretary Mearl “Lonnie” Sowers passed away last week at the age of 82.

Sowers got his start in the racing industry rubbing horses for J.P. Simpson in the late 1950's before taking time away from the backstretch to begin a career in the racing offices of the West Virginia and Maryland circuits in the decade that followed.

He would then once again find himself back at the barn in 1974 when he became an assistant trainer for Bud Delp, overseeing a shed row of 50 horses until 1978.

Most notably in his time with Delp, Sowers called his boss to tell him he had seen something different after laying eyes on the first workout of a dark gray colt who had shipped into his barn several weeks prior. The colt, who turned out to be 1979 Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Spectacular Bid, would go on to win 26 of 30 lifetime starts in his Hall of Fame career.

After leaving the backstretch for the final time in 1978, Sowers reprised his role in the Charles Town racing office, working his way up to the position of Racing Secretary in 1995 – a role he held until the track was sold. With his love of the racing industry, Sowers continued on to work as an assistant mutuel manager in the mutuels department until his retirement in 2007.

Sowers is survived by his wife of 61 years, Margaret “Peggy” Lynn Horsley Sowers; two children, including Charles Town's current Racing Manager Duane Sowers, eight grandchildren and fifteen great grandchildren. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by one brother, Thomas Sowers, Jr.

Funeral services will be held 1 p.m. Monday, February 7 at the Jefferson Chapel in Ranson, West Virginia with the family receiving friends from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Sunday at the Chapel.

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Charles Town Cancels Saturday Racing; Third Straight Card Missed Due To Winter Storm

Charles Town Races in West Virginia will not run on Saturday evening, the track posted on Twitter early this afternoon.

It marks the third straight day Charles Town has been forced to cancel races after a winter storm brought snow and sub-freezing temperatures to much of the Northeastern United States.

Racing will resume on Wednesday, Jan. 12, a makeup card for Thursday, Jan. 6.

The post Charles Town Cancels Saturday Racing; Third Straight Card Missed Due To Winter Storm appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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