CHRB In-Person Meeting Wednesday, August 17

The California Horse Racing Board will conduct an in-person meeting Wednesday, Aug. 17 beginning at 12:30 p.m. at the Del Mar Hilton. The meeting will be open to the public. Those providing unsolicited public comment on individual agenda items will be limited to two minutes and comments must relate specifically to the agenda items; regarding agenda item #8, Public Comment, no further comments will be permitted after 30 minutes. For those who do not attend, the webcast audio link on the CHRB website will provide a way to listen to the meeting. The agenda and package of materials for the meeting are available on the CHRB website and at the links in red above.

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CHRB Revises Media Policy

The CHRB rescinded its recent ruling requiring members of the media to be licensed through the and will instead allow the standard practice of allowing tracks to provide credentials.

They released the following statement Wednesday:

“While the California Horse Racing Board values safety and security in the stable area, it also recognizes the importance of a free and independent press. After considerable feedback, rather than requiring licenses or visitors passes for stable area media access, the CHRB will allow publicity departments to issue credentials for visitor access to the stable areas. The CHRB will hold the racetracks responsible for the conduct of credentialed media they authorize for stable area access.

“The CHRB needs to know who has been authorized by racetracks to enter stable areas, so publicity departments have agreed to provide the names of those individuals. The CHRB has made it clear that the lists will not be submitted for CHRB approval. The information will be used solely for the purpose of understanding who the tracks have authorized to be in the restricted area.”

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CHRB Advances 90-Day Layoff Scrutiny Rules

With the aim of reducing the incidence of large-bone fractures, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) voted unanimously Thursday to advance two new rules that would require examinations and veterinary and training record disclosures for every horse that has not had a recorded work or a race within the past 90 days.

Citing the “concerning rate” of large-bone fractures in horses returning to training after extended periods, the CHRB meeting packet stated that, “An initial examination will be required by both a regulatory veterinarian and the attending veterinarian, including review of veterinary and training records for the previous 60-day period, prior to the horse going to the track to train.

“Additionally, a follow up examination will be required between 30 and 45 days. The goal is to provide a baseline examination and identify any at-risk factors that may predispose a horse from suffering a catastrophic injury related to the shins, tibias, shoulder, pelvis, etc…”

Also, amendments were advanced to clarify existing CHRB rules regarding the specific requirements of racing soundness examinations, including the condition of the horse when presented for examination, who must be present, and how the examination information will be recorded.

“These clarifications also establish consistent requirements for both racing soundness and training soundness examinations,” the CHRB analysis stated. “Additionally, requirements for veterinary treatment records are clarified, including the timeframe for trainers to submit records and the official veterinarian's responsibility to maintain the records.”

CHRB chairman Gregory Ferraro, DVM, said prior to the vote that the new regulations are “directed at long bone fractures of the shoulder and tibia. Horses that come to these injuries have a typical profile that we've identified. This particular regulation would address that profile and require examinations at specific times in order to prevent serious injury.”

The proposed rules now advance to a 45-day public comment period, which will be followed by a final CHRB vote.

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CHRB Offers ‘Good Faith’ Leniency On Entries Unregistered With HISA

Early last month, Lisa Lazarus, CEO of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, set industry tongues wagging when indicating that horses unregistered with HISA by the launch date of the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) would be scratched if entered to race.

With HISA D-Day now upon the industry, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) offered guidance Friday about how it would be handling unregistered horses both this weekend and the weeks ahead, as per revised guidance from the HISA Authority.

The long and short of it is this: Should licensees show “good faith attempts” to register horses entered to race, the stewards will not scratch unregistered horses, said CHRB executive director, Scott Chaney.

For those licensees who refuse or have not attempted to register, their horses will be scratched, Chaney added.

Asked what evidence would constitute such a “good faith” effort, Chaney said that would ultimately be the steward's call.

“They're the only ones who can scratch at the track,” said Chaney. “The Authority's instructions were to be pretty lenient because obviously the roll-out's not perfect and registration is a work in progress.”

Chaney indicated that this waiver in California would cover this weekend as well as upcoming weeks–possibly through July.

“At some point, we're going to scratch no matter what, otherwise folks wouldn't be incentivized to register,” he said.

Part of the problem, explained Chaney, is a current lack of harmonization between the Jockey Club's InCompass system, used for entries, and the Authority's registration system.

Using Friday's entries at Pleasanton as a guide, Chaney estimated that about 50 horses and jockeys were flagged as unregistered.

Some were duplicates–the same jockeys riding in multiple races. But some were technical flags, he said.

“I remember one saying that Frank Alvarado wasn't listed as registered because when you enter through InCompass, his name in the program is Francisco Alvarado,” said Chaney. “There's lots of little problems like that where they don't match perfectly, a flag appears.”

With new racetrack safety rules going into effect Friday–such as modified crop rules, and veterinary documentation mandates–the CHRB also offered guidance on other new states of play for California's trainers.

Horses that are on the Vet's list for a length of time, but do not require an examination, workout or clear blood test for removal–like those that are simply sick–will be permitted entry while on the list, explained Chaney.

“For Vets' list [horses] that require anything other than time, they must be off the list before they can enter,” wrote Chaney, in an email.

According to Chaney, claimed horses that return a positive post-race test of any class will be voided unless the trainer specifically checks a box on the back of the claim form electing to take the horse regardless.

“Even if the new trainer changes his or her mind and would prefer to keep the horse, the claim will nevertheless be rescinded,” Chaney wrote, of any positive post-race test. “Our claim cards will take some time to catch up to the positive test rule but the rule goes into effect [Friday] nevertheless.”

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