Nine States to McConnell: Hands Off HISA In ‘Lame Duck’ Session

The attorneys general from nine states on Thursday implored United States Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell not to use the end-of-term 'lame-duck' session of Congress to ram through legislation that would tweak non-constitutionality issues with the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) by burying the measure within a much larger bill.

“It has come to our attention that you are considering proposing language related to HISA in the Defense Spending Authorization Act or other end-of-year legislation,” the AGs wrote to the senior senator from Kentucky in a Dec. 8 letter. “We urge you not to do so. HISA has already caused enormous upheaval in our States. A lame-duck session is not the time to slip new language into legislation amending HISA in response to [a recent court ruling]. Indeed, language that attempts anything other than repealing this ill-advised legislation will only make a bad situation worse.”

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on Nov. 18 ruled that the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is unconstitutional because it “delegates unsupervised government power to a private entity” and thus “violates the private non-delegation doctrine.”

On Dec. 7, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit heard arguments in a similar case that also seeks to reverse a lower court's decision to dismiss a constitutional challenge of HISA.

The state of Louisiana's AG spearheaded the effort. Also signing the letter were the AGs from Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas.

U.S. Trotting News was the first media outlet to publish the letter.

The letter continued: “As enacted, HISA disrespects [the] system of dual sovereignty. HISA's very purpose is to take away a regulatory power individual States have exercised since the Founding–to oversee and regulate horse racing within their borders–and give that power exclusively to a private agency.”

The HISA Authority “is exercising federal regulatory powers without any meaningful restraint, oversight, or adequate time for notice and comment, rushed rules that displaced existing State laws governing horse racing and exposed jockeys and horses to unsafe conditions,” the letter stated.

“Adding insult to injury, the Authority required all participants in the horse racing industry to pay assessments to cover the cost of enforcing HISA's dangerous and poorly thought-out private rules. As a final blow, the Authority attempted to cannibalize existing State personnel to implement and enforce the rules it enacted,” the letter stated.

At a later point, the four-page plea continued: “If you seek a resolution that settles controversy in the industry, then you should organize discussions between all industry participants that would identify and address everyone's concerns with HISA instead of making a surprise amendment to HISA now. Several of our states are engaged in litigation regarding problems with HISA beyond the private nondelegation issue, and amendments cannot avoid continuing, costly litigation unless they are carefully tailored to resolve all concerns.”

Two years ago this month, when McConnell was the Senate majority leader, he was instrumental in making sure HISA got passed by tucking it into a massive, year-end government funding bill that included a $900-billion COVID-19 relief package.

“Enacting HISA in 2020 in vital national legislation that had nothing to do with horse racing is part of why it failed so miserably,” the Dec. 8 letter stated. “Amending HISA in the Defense Spending Authorization Act with no notice to industry participants or States will merely repeat the same flawed approach.”

The post Nine States to McConnell: Hands Off HISA In ‘Lame Duck’ Session appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

ARCI Asks FTC to Delay HISA’s Proposed Medication Rules

The Board of the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) has unanimously requested the Federal Trade Commission to delay final action on HISA's proposed Anti-Doping and Medication Control rules until the constitutional questions being litigated are resolved, they announced in a press release Wednesday.

“We cannot have a situation where an enforcement action is overturned because the authority of the enforcing entity to act is in question,” said Ed Martin, ARCI President. “The only way to avoid that is to delay approval of HISA rules leaving existing state rules and enforcement in place for the time being. The choice for the FTC is clear, state rules are better than no rules during this time of legal uncertainty. To approve them now with this legal uncertainty is an invitation to cheaters that you might get a free ride during the first 10 days in January, if not longer.”

The ARCI release also states: “Should the FTC approve the HISA rules and penalties were imposed for a violation of those rules the action could be appealed and potentially overturned and wiped away due to the finding in the Fifth Circuit that HISA is unconstitutional.

Likewise if a racing commission enforces the existing State anti-doping rule and penalties imposed for a violation are appealed using the argument that the federal rule preempts state action the possibility that it can be overturned also exists.

The only way to avoid this Catch-22 is to leave state rules and enforcement in place by delaying final action on the HISA ADMC rules.”

The ARCI has not taken a position on the pending litigation, although some member states have and are litigating the constitutionality of the Act.

The post ARCI Asks FTC to Delay HISA’s Proposed Medication Rules appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Oral Arguments In Sixth Circuit HISA Case Heard Wednesday

CINCINNATI, OHIO — The latest challenge to the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) was the first case before the three judges selected to weigh in on the law's constitutionality Wednesday in the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, in Cincinnati.

The plaintiffs comprise the state of Louisiana; Oklahoma and its racing commission, plus West Virginia and its racing commission. Three Oklahoma tracks-Remington Park, Will Rogers Downs, and Fair Meadows-are also plaintiffs, as are the Oklahoma Quarter Horse Association, the U.S. Trotting Association, and Hanover Shoe Farms, a Pennsylvania Standardbred breeding entity.

On the other side of the aisle are the United States of America, the HISA Authority, and six individuals acting in their official capacities for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

Whether the brisk winter gloom that cloaked the austere courthouse in Downtown Cincinnati Wednesday morning was a good omen for the federal law, or a portent of further legal trouble ahead, is undecided for now, the three-judge panel offering no obvious tip of the hat as to which way it will rule as a body, though with some important clues as to their individual preferences.

The two conservative judges on the panel–Jeffrey Sutton and Richard Griffin–were the most vocal in grilling lawyers from both sides, who each were originally given 15 minutes to argue their cases, with the clock running well over time.

Judge Ransey Guy Cole, the most liberal judge on the panel, remained the quietest, largely staying away from hard constitutional questions.

Sutton–an expert on state constitutionality–was the most vociferous of the three judges, repeatedly drilling down on both sides into whether the FTC has sufficient rule making power over the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, the private entity charged with developing rules related to medication control and racetrack safety, and otherwise just known as the Authority.

The key issues surrounded the FTC's interim rule making power, and whether that was enough of an independent mechanism to keep it from being subordinate to the Authority– key problem, in the eyes of the conservative judges.

In other words, the Authority appears to wield a lot of “discretion” in the rule-making process “not reviewable” by the FTC, said Sutton. “And that's a worry,” he added.

Towards the end of the oral arguments in the Sixth Circuit–which has legal jurisdiction over the states of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee–Griffin's mind appeared firmly set against the constitutionality of the law, as written.

“The Authority has so much broad power that is not subject to review by the FTC” other than in its ability to review a proposed rule's consistency with the statutes, said Griffin.

Sutton, however, appeared somewhat swayed by the earlier arguments of attorney Pratik Shah, representing the FTC.

In pre-hearing court filings, lawyers representing the plaintiffs cite the recent ruling in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which reversed an earlier Northern District of Texas's decision that had found HISA constitutional.

The plaintiffs point out that the Fifth Circuit found HISA fundamentally different from another important relationship between a governmental agency and a private entity–that between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)–because the SEC has the power to “abrogate, add to, and delete from FINRA rules as the SEC deems necessary or appropriate.'”

In contrast, “HISA unambiguously and 'explicitly limits agency review to 'consistency,'” wrote the plaintiffs, adding that, “In sum, that court explained that 'the Constitution vests federal power only in the three branches of the federal government,' but HISA 'defies this basic safeguard by vesting government power in a private entity not accountable to the people,'” wrote the plaintiffs.

On Wednesday, Shah argued that the makeup of the rule-making relationship between the FTC and the Authority indeed mirrored that between the SEC and FINRA.

In being limited to reviewing the consistency of the Authority's proposed rules, the FTC was very similar to “a lot of law” in the relationship between the SEC and FINRA, Shah said.

Furthermore, Shah argued that the FTC's ability to write and promulgate interim final rules, many of which would go into permanent effect, is indeed enough of an independent mechanism–in the vein of the SEC–to counter concerns that the FTC has no ability to modify rules proposed by the Authority.

Attorney Matthew McGill, representing the plaintiffs, challenged that notion, arguing that the Authority has broad discretion to write its own rules, “and the FTC is utterly powerless to modify that.”

Griffin appeared sympathetic towards that argument, noting unfavorably that the FTC still remains “much more limited” in its scope to write interim final rules than the Authority's rule-making discretion.

In wrapping up his arguments, Shah referenced the defendants' own court documents–in the process, sign-posting a possible endpoint for the case.

In court documents, the defendants claim that the Fifth Circuit's ruling from last month “contradicts (without addressing) the FTC's interpretation of its independent rulemaking authority under section 3053(e), FTC Br. 32-35, and turns constitutional avoidance on its head.

“The panel's holding also overlooks that the Coal Commission in Sunshine Anthracite Coal Company v. Adkins could modify proposed minimum prices only 'to conform to the requirements' of the statute, not at its freewheeling discretion, Authority Br. 37-38–yet that scheme was 'unquestionably valid,'” the defendants write.

“For both reasons, the Fifth Circuit panel's decision is wrong–and stands at odds with not only the two other federal courts that have upheld HISA, but also 80 years of precedent from the Supreme Court (Adkins) and the courts of appeals (uniformly upholding the SEC-FINRA model). Accordingly, this Court should reject the Fifth Circuit's wayward decision,” the defendants wrote.

On Wednesday, Shah called the Adkins case “the most factually analogous” to the one before the Sixth Circuit, saying that it's “up to the Supreme Court to overturn Adkins.”

Mention of the Supreme Court raises the possibility that the highest court in the land potentially hears this case, or the one before the Fifth Circuit. For that to happen, a number of dominoes must first fall, however.

Constitutional law experts say that the Supreme Court would be more inclined to hear a HISA-related case in the event of conflicting rulings between the different appeals courts–in other words, if the Sixth Circuit finds that HISA is indeed constitutional as written.

In the interim, HISA's proponents are apparently seeking a congressional re-write of the rules, to cede the FTC greater input on the rule making process.

Last week, it was reported that Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell–who was so instrumental in pushing HISA through in 2020–is seeking that fix to be included in the full-year omnibus spending bill, which could pass later this month.

Whether or not that happens, HISA's anti-doping and medication control program is scheduled to go into effect on Jan. 1 in the vast majority of states that conduct pari-mutuel wagering.

If a congressional fix isn't sought soon, however, and if the defendants fail to get a stay in the Fifth Circuit decision, HISA will no longer be legally binding in the states of Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi come Jan. 10 next year.

Rarely if ever has the industry been in such flux–cold comfort for the thousands of trainers, jockeys, grooms, hotwalkers, exercise riders, breeders, farriers and assortment of other industry stakeholders that rely on it for their living.

The post Oral Arguments In Sixth Circuit HISA Case Heard Wednesday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights