Timeline for HISA Implementation Comes Into Clearer Focus

With the July 1, 2022, implementation date looming for the nationwide regulatory Authority mandated by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) to go into effect, Charles Scheeler, the chairman of the Authority's board of directors, on Sunday outlined the timetable for the sport's new ruling body to be fully operational.

Speaking via pre-recorded video during Sunday's 69th Annual Round Table Conference on Matters Pertaining to Racing that was hosted virtually by The Jockey Club (TJC), Scheeler said the Authority is currently developing its anti-doping and safety programs side by side, and that by the fall those initiatives will be shared publicly in an effort to generate feedback.

“All of this will be before we submit these proposed rules to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which is what is required by the Act,” Scheeler said. “And then [the FTC] will make them public; publish them in the Federal Register for a 60-day period of notice and comment. So the industry will get a second bite at the apple–another chance to comment on these rules.

“After the 60 days, the FTC will decide whether to approve all or some of these rules. We hope that they approve all of the rules that we submit to them. And then they have to be posted and finalized for a four-month period of time. So no later than March 1, 2022, for these rules to become operative on [July 1, 2022],” Scheeler said.

“We will also, in the late fall and winter, be sharing with state racing commissions our estimates of the costs for the coming year. That is required by the Act to occur no later than April 1. But it is our goal to get those numbers to the states months and months in advance of the event,” Scheeler said.

“And then, July 1, we will go live together with a new system to enforce the anti-doping and medication laws, and to make the tracks safer, and to make the sport fair for everyone,” Scheeler said.

But that timetable for implementation could face legal pushback in the form of lawsuits initiated by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (National HBPA) and several state racing commissions.

Speaking in a separate section of the Round Table video presentation, TJC's chairman, Stuart Janney III, said such obstructionist tactics won't prevail in the long run.

“They defend the status quo with lawsuits that are effectively protecting a few bad trainers, veterinarians, and horsemen at the expense of those who are honest,” Janney said. “They offer nothing in the alternative other than worn-out notions of state-by-state compacts in defense of the same broken system.”

Janney also reiterated a prediction he made during last August's Round Table video presentation that more federal arrests of alleged horse dopers are in the pipeline.

Six of 28 defendants arrested in March 2020 have already pleaded guilty to felony charges in the federal government's prosecution of an alleged “corrupt scheme” to manufacture, mislabel, rebrand, distribute, and administer performance-enhancing drugs to racehorses all across America and in international races.

Elsewhere in the two-hour Round Table presentation, two Columbia University researchers–Dr. Yuval Neria, a professor of medical psychology, and Dr. Prudence Fisher, an associate professor of clinical psychiatric social work–gave an update on the Man O' War Project, which uses Thoroughbreds in equine-assisted therapy (EAT) to treat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“We plan on capitalizing on our work so far by creating the Man O' War Center at Columbia University,” Fisher said. “And its mission will be to advance the promising field of EAT. The center will coordinate and carry out many initiatives that further our work.”

Neria said another goal is to provide EAT training to others in the field.

“Over the last two to three years, we have been approached by many programs who are eager to learn from us and implement our protocols,” Neria said. “[And] we plan to adapt our protocols for use with other groups beyond veterans with PTSD. For example, children and adolescents, and also others. With support from Ambassador [Earle] Mack, this fall we will be carrying out a pilot study with anxious youths.”

Fisher added that research work on the original protocols will be expanded by undertaking a randomized, controlled trial later this year.

“This would be a larger study, and we plan on partnering with other sites that we will train to make it work,” Fisher said.

Neria added that “a critically important part of our mission is to expand the number of retired Thoroughbred racehorses that are used in the EAT programs.”

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Jockey Club Round Table: HISA ‘Best Ever Opportunity To Right Our Badly Listing Ship’

The 69th Annual Round Table Conference on Matters Pertaining to Racing concluded Sunday with emphatic support for the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) by The Jockey Club Chairman Stuart S. Janney III, who presided over the conference and referenced in his closing remarks the arguments made by groups in the racing industry that have stated their opposition to HISA.

“When the history of this is written, it will be clear who the obstructionists were and who opposed this industry's best ever opportunity to right our badly listing ship,” Janney said. “I am proud to stand with those who support HISA, and I look forward to the needed reform it will bring to our industry and to seeing our ship finally sailing a straight course.”

Sunday's event was held virtually and streamed on jockeyclub.com and made available on NYRA's YouTube channel, Racetrack Television Network's respective platforms, and bloodhorse.com.

Janney was preceded by presentations from Charles Scheeler, chair of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority board of directors, and Dr. Tessa Muir, director of Equine Science for the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA).

Scheeler described the components of the authority's work ahead, which include the establishment of an anti-doping and medication testing program and a safety program; constituency outreach; and utilizing the industry's plethora of data, much of which will be sourced from The Jockey Club's databases. In advance of the implementation of HISA next year, plans call for the authority's board and standing committees to publish proposed rules for public comment before they are submitted to the Federal Trade Commission.

“What I saw when [I looked at HISA] was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make the sport safer for horses and jockeys, to serve the overwhelming majority of horse people who want to win fairly and who want to play by the rules…” Scheeler said.

Muir spoke of USADA's plans to work with the Thoroughbred industry, including leveraging expertise for both human and equine athletes to create best practices.

“Our aspiration is to establish and maintain a uniform and harmonized program that is centered on promoting and safeguarding the health and welfare of horses and protects the rights of all participants to race clean and win fairly,” she said.

Emily Lyman, founder and chief executive officer of Branch & Bramble, a digital marketing agency used by America's Best Racing (ABR), discussed how “social listening” online can be used to gauge public sentiment of horse racing and how highly publicized events can have a positive or negative impact on how the sport is viewed. She talked about how ABR's marketing strategy is influenced by this data and that influencers can be effectively used as brand ambassadors to introduce new audiences to horse racing.

“Maintaining the status quo doesn't protect a brand's long-term health,” Lyman said. “Without growth in impressions and public sentiment, your key audience will eventually die out.”

Will Duff Gordon, the chief executive officer of Total Performance Data (TPD), spoke in a presentation with Will Bradley, director and founder of Gmax Technology Ltd., on how TPD and Gmax have collaborated to create timing systems for horse races and how they are working with Equibase to determine how the tracking data can supplement and enhance the information that Equibase provides. They noted that this information will become more valuable with the expansion of sports betting in the United States.

“We do know from our European experience that sports that have the richest set of data, as well as pictures, as well as odds, capture the most betting turnover and handle,” Gordon said.

Dr. Yuval Neria, professor of Medical Psychology at Columbia University and director of the PTSD Research Center, was joined by Dr. Prudence Fisher, associate professor of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work at Columbia University, to talk about the Man O' War Project, which was founded by Ambassador Earle I. Mack. It is the first university-led research study to examine the effectiveness of equine-assisted therapy (EAT) in treating veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Neria described the findings as “extremely encouraging,” noting measurable changes in the parts of the brain involved in the capacity to seek and experience pleasure among trial participants. There were also decreases in symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

Moving forward, plans call for the creation of the Man O' War Center, with goals to train others in EAT protocol for veterans, adopt the protocol for other groups, pursue a larger research study, and expand the use of former racehorses for equine-assisted therapy work.

“We are proud to partner with the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance to connect groups trained in the Man O' War protocol with accredited aftercare facilities,” said Fisher. “It's a great way to incorporate more retired Thoroughbreds in EAT programs throughout the country.”

Kristin Werner, senior counsel for The Jockey Club and administrator of The Jockey Club's Thoroughbred Incentive Program, moderated an aftercare panel with panelists Erin Crady, executive director, Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA); Brian Sanfratello, executive secretary, Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association (PHBA); Beverly Strauss, executive director, MidAtlantic Horse Rescue; and Dr. Emily Weiss, vice president, Equine Welfare, American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA).

Each panelist shared their perspectives on challenges in the aftercare landscape, from securing a safe first exit from the racetrack to placing retired breeding stock. Crady talked about the TCA's Horses First Fund, which helps Thoroughbreds in case of an emergency.

“Plan, plan, and plan some more,” Crady said. If you've prepared a business plan for your racing operation, include a section on aftercare.

“Please remember one thing that I feel is paramount to your horse's future. Make every effort to retire your horse while he or she is still sound. A sound Thoroughbred can have an unlimited future.”

Strauss talked about the kill buyer market and the frequent social media frenzies when Thoroughbreds are offered for inflated prices to save them from being sold to slaughter. She warned that individuals and organizations that participate in these practices are often scams.

“If you're contacted because one of your former horses is in a kill pen, do some research, don't just throw money at it, don't just send money blindly, do research and see that the horse truly is in a bad place and then ensure its safety,” Strauss said.

Sanfratello detailed the PHBA's stance on aftercare and its creation of a code of ethics that will sanction those who knowingly send horses registered with the PHBA to slaughter.

“Our board understands that aftercare is just as important as making sure that we increase the numbers of mares bred,” Sanfratello said.

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Weiss focused on the work of the ASPCA's Right Horse Initiative, which assists with placing horses in transition. She noted that a problem seen with placing horses is that Thoroughbreds are often not located where the demand for them exists.

“There's some disconnect between the interest in the general public and getting these horses into their hands, and part of that is just getting those horses where those people are,” she said.

David O'Rourke, the president and chief executive officer of the New York Racing Association (NYRA), provided an update on that organization's efforts to promote safety, integrity, and the sport of racing. According to O'Rourke, NYRA has allotted 50% of its capital budget since 2013 to infrastructure improvements such as new track surfaces, barns, and dormitories. He also addressed the legalization of sports betting and NYRA's belief that this represents a critical opportunity for horse racing to expand its wagering options and boost handle

James L. Gagliano, president and chief operating officer of The Jockey Club, delivered a report on the activities of The Jockey Club.

Also in his closing remarks, Janney announced that Len Coleman and Dr. Nancy Cox, co-chairs of the nominating committee of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, have been awarded The Jockey Club Medal for exceptional contributions to the Thoroughbred industry.

A video replay of the conference will be available on jockeyclub.com this afternoon, and full transcripts will be available on the same site this week.

The Jockey Club Round Table Conference was first held on July 1, 1953, in The Jockey Club office in New York City. The following year, it was moved to Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

The Jockey Club, founded in 1894 and dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing, is the breed registry for North American Thoroughbreds. In fulfillment of its mission, The Jockey Club, directly or through subsidiaries, provides support and leadership on a wide range of important industry initiatives, and it serves the information and technology needs of owners, breeders, media, fans, and farms. It founded America's Best Racing (americasbestracing.net), the broad-based fan development initiative for Thoroughbred racing, and in partnership with the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, operates OwnerView (ownerview.com), the ownership resource. Additional information is available at jockeyclub.com.

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Racing And Gaming Conference Of Saratoga Returns With A More Mainstream Approach

In recent racing seasons, the Albany Law School's Racing and Gaming Conference was a hub for lawyers and racing industry executives to gather and discuss legal issues facing the racing and wagering industries. After the 2019 edition of the conference, it seemed the event may have run its course, as the college decided it would no longer host the event, which is traditionally held in Saratoga between the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale and the Jockey Club Round Table.

Attorney Patrick Brown, co-founder of Brown & Weinraub, couldn't let it go.

“I was very disappointed because I worked on it for many years,” Brown said. “I decided, well I know the conference, so why don't I step up and try to do it myself?”

Brown was on the event's advisory board for the law school, and had been a panelist, sponsor, and speaker at various times during the life of the event. The conference had been offered for continuing education credits for equine attorneys, but Brown had bigger ideas of what it could be.

Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic struck and one of Brown's first actions as the new organizer of the event was to cancel its 2020 edition. He delayed planning the 2021 conference until it became clear that the Saratoga race meet would go on with fans in attendance. Then, he got to work.

As the product of a law school, the conference has previously been focused on academic legal subjects. Brown wanted to open it up a bit, so racing fans and industry professionals could find an engaging topic presented in a way that made sense to them. While lawyers still make up a portion of the speakers and panelists at this year's event, Brown has balanced them with non-attorneys whose perspective he finds key to the issues at hand.

“I wanted to move the focus of the conference from academic/lawyer to some academics, lots of industry folks, and if we can attract some fans, just regular people who are really interested in horse racing and the gambling industry, I wanted to try to make the panels attractive to fans as well – and potential participants in horse racing,” Brown said. “I think we lawyers can get into the weeds quickly. It's interesting, and the panels I participated in were very good for lawyers but I wanted to make it less of that and more accessible to non-lawyers.”

This year's topics include an examination of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) and its challenges, information on decoupling, ownership models, sports betting in New York, mobile sports betting, esports wagering, and tribal gaming.

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Brown has also moved the event from a hotel downtown to the 1863 Club at the track and will be partnering with the New York Racing Association for the first time. It always made sense to have the event during the race meet, but Brown wanted to connect it more directly with the experience of the track, which is the primary draw for most attendees.

In some ways, Brown said he has had a career's worth of preparation to structure an event like this one (although he admits he has had considerable organizational help from Spectrum Gaming Group). Brown worked in Gov. Mario Cuomo's Counsel's Office in the late 1980s, where he advised Cuomo on matters pertaining to racing, lottery, and tribal gaming law. After Cuomo left office, Brown worked for a firm with a number of racing industry clients before launching his own firm in 2001.

He is also a Thoroughbred owner.

Brown said there are two panels he's most excited about — one he will moderate on mobile sports wagering, and another titled 'Economics of Bookmaking,' which will feature a top Vegas attorney and a professional bookmaker.

“The point of that panel is to highlight that one of the fundamental challenges of the new sports wagering is to get people to change their behavior,” said Brown. “People who bet on sports in this country have been doing it the same way for a long time and when you bet with a bookie, you don't have to put the money up, you can bet on credit. There's advantages to doing it that way, and the authorized sports books have to now get people to change that behavior.

“I really like the array of policy choices you have to make when you're trying to create a rational horse racing and gambling policy in a state. It's really fascinating to me.”

The Racing and Gaming Conference at Saratoga will be held Aug. 16 and 17. Registration is available on site or in advance at this link.

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What Will HISA Look Like?

We recently ran part one of our story on the challenges facing HISA. Today, we deal with lawsuits, adjudication, and more.

This time next year, the machinery of horse racing in the U.S. may be almost a month into a radical system overhaul.

But with scant few calendar pages between now and then, what do we know about how the cogs, wheels, and pulleys of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) will work together?

To find out, the TDN reached out to Charles Scheeler, chair of the HISA board of directors, interim executive director Hank Zeitlin, as well as several individuals listed on HISA's two standing committees. All explained that they were unable to comment publicly at present.

U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) chief executive officer Travis Tygart was also unable to speak in person within time of the story going to print, but the agency provided answers via email.

Figures familiar with the drafting process stress the changing nature of the blueprints–cold comfort to certain state regulators and other stakeholders concerned that with so many details to thrash out, few specifics have yet been made public, especially when crucial deadlines loom large, as we detailed yesterday in part one.

In part two, we try to parse through other key aspects of the program, beginning with arguably the most salient, given recent high-profile cases in the U.S.–that of enforcement.

Lawsuits

All of these points could be moot, however, if either of the two federal lawsuits seeking to strike the law down on constitutional grounds are successful.

In March, the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (National HBPA)–along with a variety of state affiliates–filed federal suit against the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), arguing that it affords powers to private individuals and a private organization in an area strictly limited to a government entity.

The following month, it was announced that a second lawsuit–spearheaded by the Oklahoma Attorney General in conjunction with that state's racing commission–was similarly focused on the constitutionality of the law, focusing in on the 10th amendment.

Judicial rulings are essentially pending in both cases.

Sarah Andrew

According to Frank Becker, a noted equine lawyer and former adjunct professor at the University of Kentucky College of Law, the “Oklahoma” case has a “significant chance” of prevailing.

“But what happens at the district court level will not be the final word–it's really going to be up to the court of appeals,” Becker says, speculating that either case could eventually be taken up by the Supreme Court.

If the district courts render rulings against the defendants, what might that mean for HISA's implementation on July 1 next year?

“While this case is pending, there will be this battle over whether the law will be enforceable in the interim,” says Becker, itemizing a chessboard set of scenarios made complicated by the possibility of inconsistent rulings by different courts in two different circuits.

One is that an injunction goes into immediate effect, in which case, the law would be put on the back burner until an appeals court meters out judgment–if, as would be likely, the government appeals the district court's decision.

Another is that a district court judge renders a stay on the injunction pending appeal. In this scenario, the appeal is “unlikely” to occur before the July 1 deadline, Becker says, meaning the law would theoretically go into effect.

Nevertheless, nothing is etched in stone.

Becker pointed to a potential precedent-setting scenario in a current case involving the cruise ship industry and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in which the judge granted a stay on an injunction, only to subsequently withdraw it. And so, “anything could happen,” says Becker.

If the case reaches the hallowed halls of the U.S. Supreme Court, a final decision “could take years,” says Becker.

“But again, you've got the issue of, if there's an injunction in place when it goes to the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court would [likely] be asked to lift the injunction pending a decision,” says Becker. And how it might decide, he adds, “is very hard to predict.”

For the purposes of the story, however, we'll take the view the law will already be functioning a year from today.

Adjudication Process

HISA's enforcement agency serves several vital purposes, from establishing a deterrence program to implementing “anti-doping education, research, testing, compliance and adjudication,” among other duties.

Racing Post

But first, who will the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority–the broad non-profit umbrella established by HISA and commonly referred to as just the “Authority”–contract with to serve this purpose?

The Authority is largely expected to enter into an agreement with USADA, but the contract hasn't yet been formally inked. Indeed, according to USADA spokesperson Adam Woullard, the agency is working through the details with the Authority, “in anticipation of signing” a contract.

If, for some reason, USADA is not the contracted enforcement agency, the law instructs the Authority to enter into an agreement “with an entity that is nationally recognized as being a medication regulation agency equal in qualification” to USADA–conceivably individual state commissions.

In terms of the enforcement agency's broad remit, the processing of violations sits high on the priority list.

But which specific set of personnel will be responsible for adjudicating the first drug-related violations that arrive after July 1 next year–those belonging to the existing regulatory infrastructures within individual states or those belonging to USADA, or the contracted enforcement agency?

Specifics remain unclear. According to Woullard, USADA would “independently handle” the “investigation and results management” arm of the program.

“Independence is the cornerstone of any effective and fair anti-doping program,” he wrote. “Complementing this, education is paramount in creating a cohesive program and we look forward to working with those within the industry to help them understand and comply with the rules.”

Asked what the adjudication process might look like on a practical, everyday basis, Woullard replied that “the exact nature of how this will look is a work in progress.”

It appears, according to several individuals familiar with the process, that a tiered approach could be taken to the adjudication of medication violations, with the severity of the infraction governing which set of personnel–either the state's or USADA's–will handle the hearing.

“Extra importance could be attached to certain races and horses,” says Bill Lear, The Jockey Club (TJC) vice chairman and someone instrumental in getting the legislation passed.

Coady

Appeals

Once a violation has been adjudicated, a notice of the sanction will be filed with the FTC. The sanctioned party then has 30 days to petition for a review of the decision, which will be handled by an administrative law judge within the FTC. That judge then has 60 days to issue a ruling.

A number of stakeholders contacted for the story questioned whether the FTC has the necessary human capacity and experience to handle its expanded obligations under HISA.

“How quickly do rules and hearings move through the federal pipeline?” says Bennett Liebman, government lawyer in residence for the Albany Law School's Government Law Center.

Liebman has previously written of the FTC that it has “much bigger business to pursue than just racing,” and that it “enforces many more laws of greater consequence to the American economy than horse racing regulation.”

The FTC failed to provide a response to questions about the steps the agency has taken to prepare for HISA's implementation.

But according to Lear, the FTC has been “very engaged” with defending the two federal lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the law.

Safety Committee

In tandem with the Anti-Doping and Medication Control Standing Committee, the Racetrack Safety Standing Committee will be responsible for establishing a uniform set of rules governing things like training and racing safety protocols that are regionally specific, crop use, racetrack surface quality standards, and a racetrack accreditation program.

What could those safety standards look like?

The safety committee is required to consider as a blueprint existing programs like the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA)'s Safety and Integrity Alliance Code of Standards, along with other comparable international programs.

“You won't see much of a sea change in most of racing,” says Alex Waldrop, president and CEO of the NTRA, pointing to tracks and jurisdictions like those in Kentucky, California, New York, and across the Mid-Atlantic region, which have in recent years implemented their own significant plans to reduce equine fatalities.

“But there are multiple states where that has not been the case,” says Waldrop.

Nevertheless, the safety measures even among the more proactive tracks and jurisdictions can vary quite significantly, and there's apprehension among respective stakeholders that the Authority's uniform safety standards won't have the same bite.

“We're pretty proud of the work we've been doing here, and we don't want to see that rolled back in any way,” says Scott Chaney, executive director of the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), pointing to the immense political headwinds the state industry has had to withstand in recent years.

Susie Raisher

Unlike the baseline medication standards, however, the law appears to provide a certain amount of individual wriggle room in the implementation of safety and welfare protocols.

According to Lear, individual tracks–but not individual states–will have the leverage to implement stricter safety standards than that outlined by the Authority.

“That said, I think HISA is going to make every effort to work with the states to create a good working relationship, and one that doesn't back up on any safety standards,” Lear says.

State racing commissions aren't expected to be rendered redundant under the new law–indeed, the Authority will likely contract state racing commissions to enforce components of the racetrack safety program.

But whether individual tracks decide to tighten their own safety standards and protocols or not, those in charge of nailing down the specifics of the safety program have the sizeable problem of wrestling with this central question, says Liebman: Which entity, the individual state commission or the federal Authority, has exactly what responsibility?

“Do racing commissions still have the power to punish riders for improper whip use?” he says. “Who will have the power to scratch a horse for medical or welfare reasons?”

Funding Concerns

Some of the touted benefits of the new law concern improvement in racing's overall intelligence infrastructure, including greater out-of-competition testing and a more comprehensive investigatory network.

HISA also calls for the implementation of a centralized database for a variety of potential key information points, including injury and fatality data, pre- and post-training and race inspections, and inclusion on a veterinarian's list.

Coady

“We'll be able to better follow these horses wherever they are on a daily basis–we'll know what they look like a week ago, a month ago, a year ago,” says Waldrop.

But undergirding the successful implementation of any of these measures is the issue of funding–what almost everyone contacted for this story described as something of an elephant in the room.

The language of the law outlines two broad scenarios–that individual racing commissions establish a mechanism to remit fees to the Authority, or else the racing commissions permit the Authority to assess the fees for them.

How will the fees be calculated?

If a state elects to collect and remit the fees itself, it may consider “foal registration fees, sales contributions, starter fees, track fees, and other fees on covered persons,” wrote Sarah Reeves, attorney with the firm Stoll Keenon Ogden and someone who has worked extensively on building the legal architecture of the law, in an email.

If a state chooses to delegate this task, then the Authority would calculate, “on a monthly basis,” the applicable fee per racing start multiplied by the number of racing starts in the state in the preceding month, wrote Reeves.

She wrote that in the latter event, it is too early to say exactly how the Authority would decide to collect the fees, “whether on a per-start fee basis or otherwise.”

Reeves noted, however, that the law precludes a double tax. “If a state chooses not to collect fees to cover the costs of the Authority in that state, the statute precludes the state from charging members of the Thoroughbred industry any fees or taxes related to anti-doping and medication control or racetrack safety,” she wrote.

As it stands, no specific budget proposals have been publicly aired. And until more specifics are made available, states are largely hamstrung as to which fee remittance route to take, multiple stakeholders told the TDN.

What's more, like a Sword of Damocles, numerous states around the county are already embroiled in budget negotiations for the next fiscal year or two–like in Wyoming, currently in the process of thrashing out their 2022-23 biennial budget, says Charles Moore, the Wyoming Gaming Commission's executive director.

“Here we are going into a budget session and we don't know what to expect–will there be a cost, and if so, what will it be? What is the net effect?” Moore says.

Coady

The longer budget details take to concretize, the more likely are individual states to punt broader everyday responsibilities over to USADA, certain stakeholders warn.

In that scenario, does USADA have enough personnel to manage a larger-than-anticipated workload?

In answer, Woullard pointed to a recent hire in Dr. Tessa Muir, newly minted director of their Equine Testing Program.

“We will continue to recruit experts in the field and train our existing staff for the huge responsibility ahead of us,” Woullard wrote, adding that while USADA will hire additional personnel, including those with equine-specific expertise, “There is significant overlap in several areas of equine and human anti-doping, particularly in relation to doping practices, test planning and risk analysis.”

Lear, however, argues that “HISA is working hard to zero in costs,” and adds that, while “the principal driver of added costs is in out-of-competition testing,” federal consolidation and centralization will bring about efficiencies through economies of scale.

What's Next

In the meantime, some much sought-after details about the Authority could soon be available for public consumption.

On Aug. 15 at The Jockey Club's next annual Round Table Conference, Scheeler is expected to give his first public presentations on developments thus far.

According to USADA spokesperson Woullard, Tygart and Muir have also been invited to appear at the round table event.

If there's an overarching sentiment among industry stakeholders wondering how HISA will fit into their everyday operations, it's centered around caution and circumspection.

“From my own perspective, they ought to be as practical as possible getting started,” says Alan Foreman, chairman and CEO of the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (THA). “They're going to have to build confidence in the whole process as it's such a dramatic change.”

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