RRP Announces New Division For Recently-Retired Broodmares

Recognizing the growing need to champion an underserved population of the Thoroughbred industry, the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) announced today that the 2023 Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, presented by Thoroughbred Charities of America, will include a pilot program for a broodmare division of competition. Recently-retired broodmares will compete alongside traditional Makeover entrants in all ten offered disciplines, but will be pinned and recognized separately, competing for a separate pot of $10,000 in prize money.

The implementation of the new broodmare division is made possible with a grant from the ASPCA. Additional support from farms and regional breeders groups is anticipated.

“As the Thoroughbred Makeover has made a proven impact on the population of horses retiring from racing, we've gotten an increasing call in recent years for a channel for Thoroughbred broodmares who are ready for their third career,” said RRP executive director Kirsten Green. “Although the needs of this group are somewhat different from the original Makeover eligibility, the principal is still the same: horses who have received the investment of quality care and training are more likely to find lasting homes. We're excited to offer a modified division to make a contribution to that outcome.”

To be eligible for the pilot broodmare division, horses must meet the following criteria:

  • Jockey Club-registered
  • Have foaled or been bred in the 2021 breeding season or after, as reported by The Jockey Club
  • Have one lifetime start or published work
  • Since the history of each broodmare can vary significantly, broodmares will not be subject to the 15-ride limit
  • Broodmares may not have had prior shows or competitions

The training period for all 2023 Thoroughbred Makeover horses opens on December 1. Trainer applications will open for drafting on December 15, and will be open for submission on January 2 through January 20, 2023. Accepted trainers will be announced on or before February 15, and trainers can register horses at the point of application through July 31.

Complete rules for the broodmare division will be available along with general rule updates when the 2023 rulebook is published in early December at TheRRP.org.

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42 Organizations Receive Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Accreditation

The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance has awarded accreditations to 42 Thoroughbred aftercare organizations for 2022.

The 42 organizations include 41 previously accredited organizations and one that received accreditation for the first time. The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, the only accrediting body in Thoroughbred aftercare, now has a network of 81 organizations with approximately 180 facilities in North America.

“Congratulations to the 42 organizations who earned their Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance accreditation. Earning TAA accreditation is a true testament to an organization's dedication to providing the best care possible for our Thoroughbreds,” said TAA president Jeffrey Bloom.

“TAA-accreditation proves to the racing industry that its Thoroughbreds are going to the best possible aftercare organizations in North America, and although this stamp of approval is reassuring, funding is still a concern to assist these groups and the thousands of retired racehorses in their care,” Bloom added. “We encourage everyone to support the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance and its 81 accredited charities.”

The 42 organizations earning accreditation this year are: After the Races, Bright Futures Farm, Inc., CANTER Kentucky, CANTER Michigan, Caribbean Thoroughbred Aftercare, Center for Racehorse Retraining, Central Kentucky Riding For Hope, Days End Farm Horse Rescue, Down The Stretch Ranch, Equestrian Inc., Equine Advocates Inc., Equine Rescue & Adoption Foundation, Final Furlong, Inc., Finger Lakes Thoroughbred Adoption Program, Friends of Ferdinand, Inc., Galloping Out, Harmony and Hope Horse Haven, Inc., Healing Arenas, Inc., Heart of Phoenix Equine Rescue, Hidden Acres Rescue for Thoroughbreds, Hope's Legacy Equine Rescue, Illinois Equine Humane Center, Lollypop Farm, Mitchell Farm Equine Retirement, Inc., NEER North, Our Mims Retirement Haven, Inc., Out Side In, Inc., R.A.C.E. Fund, Inc., Remember Me Rescue, RVR Horse Rescue, Sandia Creek Ranch Auxiliary Foundation, Second Call Thoroughbred Adoption and Placement, Inc., Second Chance Thoroughbreds, Inc., Second Stride, Inc, Square Peg Foundation, The Foxie G Foundation, The Susan S. Donaldson Foundation, This Old Horse, Inc., Thoroughbred Athletes, Inc., Tranquility Farm – The Harry A. Biszantz Memorial Center for Thoroughbred Retirement, TRRAC Thoroughbred Retirement, Rehabilitation, and Careers, War Horses at Rose Bower.

Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance-accredited organizations undergo a thorough application and inspection process prior to accreditation being awarded to ensure they meet the TAA Code of Standards, which covers five key areas: operations, education, horse health care management, facility standards and services, and adoption policies and protocols. Facility inspections are conducted at all facilities housing Thoroughbreds for each organization. Ongoing updates and re-inspections are required of all organizations as a condition of accreditation.

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“As the TAA's 10th year of service comes to a close, we are grateful for the 81 accredited organizations who will move with us into the new year to continue the TAA's mission to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbreds once their involvement in the racing industry comes to a close,” said Janice Towles, TAA accreditation and grants manager.

“I would also like to extend my heartfelt thanks to those that contributed to the TAA's accreditation process, Towles added. “The TAA Accreditation Committee which met weekly for the last six months, TAA Accreditation Committee chair Kristin Werner, TAA inspection coordinator Suzie Picou-Oldham, and the dozens of individuals across North America who perform facility inspections, many of whom give their time and resources to the TAA for free.”

All organizations that hold Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance accreditation are eligible to receive financial grants to support the care of their Thoroughbreds. Grant applications are currently being reviewed and the total grant amount awarded by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance will be announced this month. Since 2012, the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance has awarded $24.5 million to accredited organizations.

The full list of 81 organizations, information about the accreditation process, and the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance's Code of Standards can be found on ThoroughbredAftercare.org.

Based in Lexington, Ky., the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that accredits, inspects, and awards grants to approved aftercare organizations to retrain, rehome, and retire Thoroughbreds using industry-wide funding. Along with continued funding from its original partners Breeders' Cup, The Jockey Club, and Keeneland Association, the TAA is supported by owners, trainers, breeders, racetracks, aftercare professionals, and other industry members. Since inception in 2012, the TAA has granted more than $24.5 million to accredited aftercare organizations. Currently 81 aftercare organizations comprised of approximately 180 facilities across North America have been granted accreditation.

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Veterinary Medicine: Starting Salaries Trending Up, Debt Down 

For the first time in 17 years, veterinarian salaries are trending up while debt is trending down. The mean debt-to-income ratio for new veterinarians is the lowest it's been since 2005 at 1.4:1. 

Mean educational debt was down to $147,258, and the mean starting salary for full-time veterinarians, not just those practicing equine vet med, was $111,242.

Dr. Bridgette Bain, a senior economist and associate director of the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) Veterinary Economics Division, discussed some of the results of this year's AVMA Senior Survey. 

Bain reported that in 2022, the mean starting salary was $114,027 for vets in private practice and $87,862 for those in public practice. Vets in advanced education (other than residencies and internships) made $53,987, while $48,193 was paid for residencies and $43,931 for internships.

This year, 43 percent of graduating vets went into corporate practice; they had a mean starting salary of $124,686, compared with the $105,637 salary of vets at independent practices. Graduates who went to work for a corporate-owned practice had $157,810 in mean educational debt, compared with $147,472 for new graduates who went to work for a private, independently owned hospital or clinic. 

Corporate practices provided a signing bonus to 81 percent of new-graduate offers, at a mean of $27,181, while only 42 percent of offers made by independent practices had a signing bonus, at a mean of $10,678. Corporate practices also provided moving stipends more often, in 48 percent of offers, at a mean of $6,180. Just 23 percent of the offers made by independent practices included a moving allowance, at a mean of $3,626.

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Between 2018 and 2022, at least 45 percent of new graduates from U.S. veterinary colleges joined companion animal practices; in 2022, 48 percent of new graduates went into companion animal medicine.

The percentage of vets entering mixed animal, food animal and equine practice have been fairly flat since 2013. In 2022, 8.9 percent of vets went into mixed animal practice, 3.2 percent went into food animal practice, and 1.5 percent went into equine practice.

The debt loads of new vets varied: 25 percent of new graduates had $200,000 or more of debt from earning their veterinary degree, while 13 percent had $300,000 or more of debt. Another 18 percent had no debt, while 10 percent had debt of less than $100,000, and the majority – at 34 percent — had debt loads of $100,000 to $200,000.

Mean debt broken down by ethnicity was as follows: 

  • Black or African American graduates had $188,820 in mean debt
  • Hispanic or Latino graduates had $183,596 in mean debt
  • White graduates had $146,213 in mean debt
  • Asian graduates had $107,399 in mean debt

Scholarships, grants and personal savings covered up to a quarter of tuition for 93 percent of graduates. Educational loans covered more than three-quarters of tuition for 49 percent of graduates. From 2020 to 2022, the percentage of tuition covered by families increased from 25 percent to 28 percent. The percentage of tuition covered by loans decreased in the same timeframe from 60 percent to 55 percent.

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Voss: Where Were The Veterinary Boards In The Grasso Case?

There's a lot to be mad about when reading prosecutors' pre-sentencing reports (PSRs) in the ongoing 2020 federal doping case.

For defendants who have entered guilty pleas and avoided trial, as most of them have to this point, I've learned the government's PSRs are among the most interesting documents in the whole file. In lieu of having to present evidence against the defendant, it's the prosecution's last opportunity to get a few shots in as they advocate for their preferred prison sentence. Sometimes, as they did in the case of Jorge Navarro, they'll whip out a few particularly stomach-churning details from their wire taps and intercepted text messages when they can show how little remorse the defendant had for their actions in the moment.

Read our coverage of the prosecutors' PSR on Navarro from December 2021 here.

This was certainly the case with Dr. Louis Grasso, one of the veterinarians indicted alongside a number of harness horsemen with similar drug adulteration and misbranding charges to the vets and trainers in the Navarro indictment.

Texts between Grasso and unidentified horsemen reveal that he's well aware that he had a stormy persona in the racing world.

In a text message to an unidentified person, Grasso wrote he has “ALWAYS been the bad guy so that's [his] reputation” that he “plays into it because it keeps the persona where [he] likes it!!!” and “all it does is make [his] business even larger [because] people seem to like the bad guy LOL LOL.”

In an intercepted communication with co-defendant and horse trainer Thomas Guido III, Grasso discussed the death of an unidentified horse of Guido's, which Grasso attributed to an injection of “pure N-butyl alcohol.” It's not clear whether Guido got the N-butyl alcohol from Grasso or what he thought he was using it for.

“Guarantee [N-butyl alcohol is] what killed him … guarantee you didn't shake it up enough, you grabbed too much N-butyl alcohol pure and you fucking killed him. I've seen that happen twenty times,” Grasso said, according to the PSR.

Read our coverage of the Grasso PSR here.

So, he considered himself a villain who clearly knew the risks of allowing or encouraging laypeople to inject substances of questionable origin but sold and distributed those things to them anyway, despite having trained as a veterinarian.

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I can be disgusted. Clean trainers and honest veterinarians reading how Grasso bragged about lying to racing commissions on two occasions to get trainers out of valid post-race positive tests can be repulsed. We can wish the very worst for him, not that he's likely to lose sleep over it.

But one particular group of people reading his words should be embarrassed – state veterinary boards.

At the time he was arrested in 2020, Grasso still held an active veterinary license. In fact, that's the basis of some of his behavior that triggered the federal charges. Prosecutors say Grasso allowed co-defendant Donato Poliseno to use his veterinary license number to purchase drugs that Poliseno then sold – mostly, it seems, to laypeople. (Poliseno was neither a doctor nor a pharmacist.)

The thing is, Grasso built his self-described bad boy reputation over the course of years. There was the 1992 incident in which he was discovered distributing anabolic steroids to bodybuilders and arrested on federal charges. Then in 2000 he was arrested again for distributing controlled substances in Delaware, despite having no license to practice there. He was found with a variety of drugs and plastic baggies filled with pills in his car after fleeing to evade the police officers who'd showed up to arrest him.

In that case, the Delaware Board of Professional Regulation issued a warning to him, making clear that he wasn't licensed to distribute drugs there, and he continued on with his behavior anyway.

In both those cases, Grasso managed to work deals for himself lessening the charges he pleaded guilty to and their associated penalties. He lost his DEA license after the second case, which reduced his ability to prescribe certain types of medication. And still, even at this very moment, Louis A Grasso is listed in the license verification system with the New York Office of the Professions as having a registered license to practice veterinary medicine. He also has an active veterinary license in New Jersey, where it had previously been suspended for five years following the 1992 incident with the anabolic steroids.

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(I should say that to their credit, New York Gaming Commission officials revoked Grasso's license years ago after they found out he was violating pre-race drug guidelines and giving out blank scratch forms. The case in Delaware was also tied in with racing authorities, who alerted law enforcement that he was treating racehorses. So in this situation at least, it seems state racing authorities were on top of a situation that state veterinary boards were willing to ignore.)

I wrote about what is, quite frankly, the total ineptitude of state veterinary boards back in 2018.

You can read that piece here.

I learned at the time that there are several problems with this regulatory system. Vet boards are almost exclusively made up of current and former veterinarians who don't like to be seen as lashing out against one of their own. Most of them are also unwilling to take any action against a licensee at the center of a criminal case until after that case has completely reached a conclusion – which, since Grasso hasn't been sentenced yet, is probably why his licenses still appear valid. After that conclusion is reached, some of them are legally required to conduct their own “investigations,” even if that means just reviewing another agency's legwork.

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The boards also may be hogtied by their own laws; some may not have catch-all regulations allowing them to immediately suspend or revoke someone's license if they're arrested or enter into plea agreements on charges related to their professional activities.

Perhaps most disturbingly, state vet boards aren't typically putting a lot of effort into investigation and enforcement; they wait to get complaints from members of the public or law enforcement and use those as the basis to start an investigation on someone. One state spokeswoman even told me they sometimes find out about a potential violation of veterinary practice law from members of the media asking them questions, which I find astounding. I like to think I'm a good reporter, but I should not be one of the public's primary lines of defense for an entire profession; by the time I'm looking for a comment, damage has already been done to someone, somewhere.

But in Grasso's case, the boards did know he was a bad actor. In 2012, an investigation from the New York Times took a look at Grasso, who by then had had his racing veterinary license revoked. The story revealed that he was working away at training centers in New York, and was the veterinarian for a barn that had five positives for oxymetazoline, a component of the human nasal spray Afrin. The trainer said Grasso had been putting it in a nebulizer treatment he gave to most horses in the barn. Oxymetazoline is banned by FEI and is not approved by the FDA for use in animals, though Grasso claimed its use was common in racehorses at the time.

The Times contacted the New York Education Department's Office of Professional Discipline, which oversees its vet board and was told in part: “We have recently taken affirmative steps to have the Racing and Wagering Board share data following their review of racetrack veterinary medicine practices.”

This, I infer, was sort of a non-responsive suggestion that the vet board can't possibly know what a racing veterinarian could be doing wrong unless the racing commission tells them. But of course, Grasso had a history of federal charges that should have told the story well enough. Did the Delaware case really not violate New York's practice law? Did his provision of veterinary paperwork (scratch forms) to non-vets really cross no lines? What about his distribution of controlled drugs? And if none of that behavior was illegal under the vet board's regulations – shouldn't they change that?

That neither New York or New Jersey's state boards were willing to take a hard look at a repeat offender is appalling. The board members in both states carry a responsibility for the risks taken by horses subjected to his unethical and uncaring behavior for years up to his arrest. Think about how many horses that must have been.

Grasso did speak with the Times for its story saying, in part, “anything that goes wrong in harness racing they point to me” and accusing regulators of having a vendetta against him.

“Veterinarians out in the field are out there to help horses, not hurt them,” Grasso told the Times. “We are probably the only ones who have the horses' well-being in mind.”

Some more than others, it seems.

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