When It Comes To Decoupling, ‘Subsidies’ Is A Dirty Word For Some, The Perfect One To Others

The way someone talks about decoupling in horse racing will almost instantly tell the listener whether that person is for or against it. A panel at the Racing and Gaming Conference At Saratoga Aug. 16 struggled to agree even on how to refer to the money given to racetracks by casino companies – are they subsidies, or aren't they? And should they continue?

There was a time when casino companies and racetracks were competitors, but about 40 years ago when casinos began expanding, casinos made a deal with the racetrack ownership in the state where they wanted to build – allow us to coexist, and you can have a share of our revenue. Most of the time, that money goes into purse accounts and may sometimes be transferred to offset the use of a racetrack's physical plant, in the case of tracks that are host to casino games.

Marc Dunbar, a Florida-based shareholder of Dean, Mead and Dunbar, said he has worked for racetracks and casino companies alike and watched decoupling contribute to the end of greyhound racing in Florida. The shift was small at first, Dunbar said – at first, poker rooms were authorized to operate but only on live racing days, then on dark days. The same thing happened with simulcast – at first harness tracks had to race year-round in order to import signals year-round but over time they were able to cut back live racing by about two-thirds.

“Lawyers like me and others came up with alternative ways to race horses and still meet the statutory minimum,” Dunbar acknowledged. “Decoupling is here to stay.”

Once casinos no longer have to give a portion of revenue to purse accounts and their licenses are no longer dependent on the existence of live racing, they're able to shed live racing from their business plan. That's a good thing for many of them, because live racing isn't all that profitable. It was ultimately a partnership between animal rights activists and casinos that made Greyhound racing in Florida illegal, according to Dunbar, and he believes that partnership could happen again to eliminate live horse racing.

While those looking from the outside in call those payments from casinos to racetracks “subsidies,” that's not a comfortable term for those inside the racing industry who want to preserve that cash flow. Thinking about those legally-required payments as subsidies isn't a good look for the racing industry, according to Sharon Ward, policy and communications consultant and former director of Pennsylvania's Budget Office.

“Pennsylvania is not like New York,” said Ward. “There is no glamor, no parades, and no people in fancy dress. There are very few people taking their kids on a Sunday outing to the racetrack. It has a very different market. The allure that surrounds horse racing and has for a long time doesn't exist, certainly, in Pennsylvania. By every measure, it's declining.”

From the perspective of a taxpayer, said Ward, it's hard to justify allowing horse racing to continue getting subsidies from casinos, because they could rightly view that as money that would otherwise be paid to the state in taxes. Ward's calculations find about $15,000 in benefits per horse to owners through casinos, while state subsidy programs to college students only amount to about $5,000 per student. Even industry-generated figures totaling jobs and economic impact generated by racing pale in comparison to other industries in Pennsylvania, like tourism, which Ward says aren't given the same government-mandated cash flow. The fact that owners are among the direct beneficiaries of increased purses, and yet don't expect to make a profit on their racing stable almost makes the system more problematic, in Ward's view, as she likened it to the state diverting funds to someone to support maintenance of their sailboat or fishing equipment.

“Most businesses have to make a profit, and if they don't, they have to change their business model to make a profit,” said Ward. “Why haven't you? Or, I guess you have, by getting taxpayer subsidies.”

[Story Continues Below]

“What about the people you're taking this money from?” asked Joe Faraldo, president of the Standardbred Owners Association of New York and director of the U.S. Trotting Association. “What about those grooms, what about those guys who sell food outside the Plainfield Avenue gate at Belmont Park?

“There are guys in our industry that want to get rid of racing (these are mostly private track owners on the harness side) because if they get rid of racing, they get rid of a lot of the costs and a lot of the problems they have with racing. That's a horrible thing, and it's going on.”

Joe Appelbaum, president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association and NYRA board member, acknowledged that there is great variability from one state to the next as far as the health of their racing industries and the economic impact of those industries. He expressed frustration, however, that so much casino revenue had gone into purses over the years and not into developing new ownership or capital projects at many tracks.

Many of the usual arguments from the industry, like its ability to preserve jobs and green space in urban areas, aren't compelling to state legislators like they used to be, according to Dunbar. He said he routinely had Florida legislators ask him why The Stronach Group didn't give up on racing at Gulfstream and build condominiums on the valuable real estate there.

“We have to be real that we are going to go through a contraction in order for this game to survive another 100 years,” Dunbar said.

The post When It Comes To Decoupling, ‘Subsidies’ Is A Dirty Word For Some, The Perfect One To Others appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Florida Horsewomen Come Together To Save Calder’s Resident Barn Cats

When Gulfstream Park West, still known to most as Calder Race Course, closed its gates earlier this month, it was the end of an era. After five decades of the familiar cycle of horses, people, and equipment moving in and out of barns, the last van has carried the last hoof off the property and the tack rooms have been emptied for the final time.

But that doesn't mean that all signs of life were gone from the property.

Madeleine Sciametta and Allison Hickey, lifelong racetrackers who had called Calder home for years, began asking around as the track approached its end – what about the barn cats?

Like most racetracks, Calder was crawling with cats, from pets who arrived with the horses and were tucked into tack rooms at night to completely feral creatures who would come out to be fed and vanish again. Sciametta and Hickey each brought food to separate colonies of cats on different ends of the property and say there were at least four feeding stations, each with its own group of cats. Sciametta said a number of stables would arrive with cats and then leave them behind when they packed up and went to the next track. Then there were people who, knowing feral cats were fed at the track, would dump their household pets still wearing their collars off at the gate, assuming someone else would care for them.

Horses and people were supposed to be off the grounds by April 5. As the date approached, it became clear to Sciametta and Hickey that while lots of people said they wanted to help, no one else was stepping up. On April 15, The Stronach Group's lease of the property will expire and it will be transferred back to Churchill Downs. Most horsemen expect the remaining buildings (the grandstand was leveled in 2015) will be razed once CDI takes possession of the track again.

Buddy, who is known as the “ambassador of Calder” used to monitor morning training alongside the paramedics and sit in a chair in the walking ring during afternoon racing. Randy Halvorsrod photo

“I was looking at all the cats there and knew nobody was going to do anything about it,” said Hickey. “I think a lot of people on the track wanted to help, but they didn't know what to do, or they were busy working. I think Madeleine and I, we see something that needs to be done and we just find a way to do it.”

Sciametta and Hickey waited to begin collecting cats until near the move-out date, not wanting to inadvertently scoop up someone's pet. When it became clear the deadline was approaching, they began setting traps, still not sure what to do with the animals they caught.

“I used to say, I don't want any barn cats, they're always underfoot,” Sciametta said. “But since I started feeding them, you start to get attached to them. Especially the ones in my colony, they were like someone's pet … when it came time to close, I couldn't just put my stuff in my car and drive out the stable gate and leave those cats sitting there, waiting for me to come feed them the next day and not be there.”

The pair began gathering up the cats they could and posting to social media looking for help. Hickey said that at most of the tracks where she and her husband, trainer Bill Hickey, have stabled, there are people who take it upon themselves to feed and fix the resident cat population. Sometimes they're part of a coordinated effort, as is true at Saratoga, and sometimes it's just racetrackers taking cats to the nearest veterinary clinic and paying for a spay/neuter surgery. Miami-Dade County Animal Services had also trapped and spayed or neutered cats, releasing them back on the track through the years. So, while most of the cats had been fixed, a number had other medical needs like dental work or infectious disease testing that would need to be done. Additionally, most of them – Sciametta estimated 70 percent – were feral or semi-feral. She found takers for the friendly cats quickly, but those that couldn't be lap cats were more challenging to place.

Through the power of the Facebook algorithms, Sciametta's call for help reached Randy Halvorsrod, who owns Halvorsrod Farm in Wellington, Fla., and happens to foster cats for Bella's Promise Pet Rescue in Boca Raton, Fla. Bella's Promise is based completely on foster care homes and works with local county animal control centers to source animals to homes. Halvorsrod said that perhaps surprisingly, while there is an overpopulation of stray dogs and cats in South Florida, there is an underpopulation of needy pets in the Northeast, specifically in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Nearly all the animals saved by Bella's Promise are transported north for successful adoptions.

“I knew the scale [of the problem]; I didn't know I could save this many cats with her,” said Halvorsrod. “Rescues usually prefer kittens and pretty cats. That's how it is because everyone wants a kitten. I called the head of Bella's Promise and she said, 'Take them. We'll figure it all out.' The scale is huge but I think at most racetracks you have a huge amount of cats.”

Patty, an older cat, lived in the same tack room for a decade as trainers came and went. Randy Halvorsrod photo

To date, the network of advocates for the Calder cats have trapped and placed more than 50 cats in barn homes, adoptive homes, or foster care. As of this week, Hickey estimated there were only 10 or so left on the Calder property. Sciametta's posts also reached Desiree Barbazon, an Ocala-based realtor who specializes in selling horse farms. Thanks to Barbazon, Sciametta says a large number of the trapped cats went to barn placements in Ocala and Wellington.

“I just put it out there, like hey guys these cats need help,” said Barbazon. “It went viral. I kind of guilted everybody into it – can't you open your heart to one cat? I had people on my Facebook saying, 'I used to gallop horses at Calder, I'll take one.'”

At one point, the demand was so great that Sciametta and Hickey coordinated a ride for 18 cats to the Central Florida area in a specially-outfitted air-conditioned van hired by The Stronach Group to take the kitties to new assignments in barns in Barbazon's area.

For the women who came together to help the cats, it's a fitting way to say goodbye to a property that featured prominently in their racing journeys.

“Everybody talks about the horse community doesn't come together and stand by each other, but in this venture it really worked out,” said Sciametta.

“I walked hots at Hialeah as a kid; Calder was more of a factory type,” said Halvorsrod, who also ran the shed for The Oaks Thoroughbreds at Calder and worked the auctions that were held there through the years. “It was a good, working track. It's sad, the whole thing. I was born and raised in Miami. The track's 50 years old and I'm 66. It's been there the whole time.”

The buildings may soon be gone, but the dozens of adopters will keep their own little piece of life at Calder with them a bit longer.

As the rehoming effort draws to a close, Sciametta and Hickey say the best way the public can help is by donating to Bella's Promise, which took on the significant cost of vetting dozens of cats to prepare them for rehoming. For more information or to donate, visit its Facebook page here.

The post Florida Horsewomen Come Together To Save Calder’s Resident Barn Cats appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Chocron Enters Guilty Plea In Case That Tied Horsemen’s Accounts To Money Laundering

Audrey Strauss, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that Jose Morley Chocron pled guilty today before U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff to one count of money laundering. Chocron laundered more than $500,000 in funds that had been represented to him to be the proceeds of a scheme to bribe Brazilian political officials, using a network and bank accounts to which he had access by virtue of his operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business.

U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said:  “Jose Chocron's black-market banking was designed to facilitate tax evasion, and was used to facilitate what he thought was the bribery of a foreign official. Unbeknownst to Chocron, the FBI had identified his network and worked quickly to dismantle it. This Office will continue to ensure the integrity of the U.S. financial system by identifying and prosecuting shadow banking operations like Chocron's.”

According to the Complaint, the Indictment, and other filings in this case:

Between May 2019 and October 2019, Chocron, working with his co-conspirators, utilized his network of contacts and bank accounts to launder funds that had been provided to him by individuals who – unbeknownst to Chocron – were working for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”). Those individuals informed Chocron that the funds were the proceeds of bribes that had been paid to Brazilian public officials in order to obtain licenses and permits. On four occasions, Chocron accepted cash from individuals who were working for the FBI or arranged to have the cash delivered to his associates. He then arranged for the funds to be transferred to bank accounts specified by the FBI, minus a commission payment.

Chocron explained that he was able to receive large amounts of cash in the United States and arrange for those funds to be transferred to bank accounts because Chocron “ha[d] . . . people here that need cash.  They will transfer to you, because they don't want to pay taxes . . .  What do I do? I give them the money and they make a transfer to me.”  He also requested a higher commission for his services than initially offered, stating “Let's be clear, that's laundering money.”

Chocron, 61, of Spain and Venezuela, pled guilty to one count of money laundering, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. The maximum potential sentence in this case is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge. In connection with his guilty plea, Chocron also admitted that he operated an unlicensed money transmitting business, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1960.

Chocron is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Rakoff on July 16, 2021, at 4:00 p.m.

Ms. Strauss praised the outstanding work of FBI New York's Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force.

The prosecution of this case is being overseen by the Office's Money Laundering and Transitional Criminal Enterprises Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrew C. Adams, Benet J. Kearney, and Sarah Mortazavi are in charge of the case.

Editor's note: The preceding press release was distributed by the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Chocron was named a March 2020 indictment alongside Florida trainer Alfredo Lichoa and several others. A superseding indictment named only Lichoa, Chocron, and Schachtel. Read about that case here. Lichoa has since entered a guilty plea to a charge of money laundering conspiracy.

The post Chocron Enters Guilty Plea In Case That Tied Horsemen’s Accounts To Money Laundering appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Irad Ortiz Bobblehead Promotion Brings In $22K For PDJF

Jockeys and Jeans in conjunction with Uncle Louie G's Italian Ices, an onsite Gulfstream Park vendor, raised over $22,000 for the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund Saturday March 13 through sales of the masked Irad Ortiz bobbleheads at the track and online.

Ortiz personally signed hundreds of the bubbleheads and Klaravich Stables, whose colors the bobblehead wears, made a substantial donation.

“To say this promotion was a success would be an understatement,” said Jockey and Jeans President, Barry Pearl. “Irad Ortiz is not only a champion rider but a first-class guy who truly cares about his fallen brothers and sisters. He spent a lot of time with us preparing for this event. And the entire team at Gulfstream Park really came through for us as they have in the past, and we know they will in the future.”

Jockeys and Jean Committee member Kenny Katz, who owns Uncle Louie G's Italian ices which sells at the track, birthed the idea and worked closely with track staff to make it a success. Last year he also oversaw the Tyler Gaffalione Bobblehead sale at the same track.

“I'm always amazed and truly touched when racing fans everywhere spend their hard-earned money to help disabled former jockeys,” said Katz.

Pearl and committee member Leah Whitsell, along with paraplegic former jockey Roger Blanco, were also on hand.

“I want to thank all who helped and especially every one of those many hundreds who purchased a bobblehead,” said Pearl. “We are still getting orders from around the world.”

You can still order a Irad Ortiz bobblehead at JockeysandJeans.com

Jockeys and Jeans was founded in late 2014 by five former jockeys, and the all-volunteer group has since raised over $1.6 million for the PDJF, which makes monthly payments to over 60 former jockeys who suffered career ending racing injuries.

The post Irad Ortiz Bobblehead Promotion Brings In $22K For PDJF appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights