Letter to the Editor: Save HHR and the Health of Ky Racing & Breeding

by Elisabeth Jensen and Doug Cauthen

We believe and assume that most people reading this letter know that Historical Horse Racing (HHR) has been in the news a lot lately. But to quickly summarize, just last week, the Kentucky Supreme Court officially ruled that it would not rehear the case where it ruled, in principle, that at least certain HHR machines could not continue UNLESS the Kentucky Legislature provides legislation to allow HHR to qualify as pari-mutuel racing per the definition they alone can provide.  This is an urgent issue, as HHR has helped make Kentucky a premier year-round racing circuit and has helped add further to the significant economic impact racing and breeding have for the state of Kentucky. This urgency became even more apparent when Keeneland and the Red Mile halted operations at their HHR facilities yesterday due to the recent ruling.

Again as a quick summary of the facts:  HHR's impact on the Kentucky industry has allowed Kentucky to compete with neighboring state tracks that were padding their purses with casino money, and eventually set Kentucky apart from competing states by creating a magnet that is drawing horse operations from around the country to the Commonwealth, and allows those already established here to remain economically feasible. HHR alone contributed $36 million to racing purses in 2019 alone, and it is growing annually. Direct taxes to the Kentucky general fund total over $52 million to date, and are growing annually, if HHR is permitted to continue.  HHR facilities directly employ 1,400 people and pay $45 million in annualized direct payroll and benefits alone. Additionally, the racetracks pay $100 million in state and local taxes each year. HHR has contributed millions of dollars annually to Thoroughbred and Standardbred breeders and non-race breeds, as well as other state programs like the University of Louisville Equine program, the Higher Education Fund and the Drug Research Fund. With incentive structures in Kentucky that benefit breeders, trainers and owners who keep their horses in Kentucky, HHR is responsible for the positive growth in the health of the industry and in part the industry's relatively healthy $5.2 billion economic impact on the Commonwealth, and employment of nearly 60,000 people, ALL of whom also pay taxes. Furthermore, Kentucky racing associations have made investments of nearly $1 billion, which again employs more people.

Call to Action: Please Use the Link Below To E-mail Your Legislator In Support Of HHR

A successful racing circuit in Kentucky has a trickle-down effect far beyond the racetrack, and benefits breeders, feed and bedding suppliers, tack and equipment dealers, van companies, veterinarians, farm staff, blacksmiths, owners, trainers and so many others in communities throughout Kentucky, particularly those in the hospitality industry which relies heavily on visitors to the state.

We will lose the economic support and all the investment that has occurred to date if the Kentucky State legislature does not address this issue to clearly permit HHR, as the KY Supreme Court has advised. So please spend three minutes and use the following link to find your legislator in Kentucky and tell them to support HHR and support the economy of Kentucky.

It is extremely easy–just hit the link horseswork.com and it will take you to the KEEP website, and you will see the red highlighted box that says “send a message to your legislator.” Click on that, and then the subsequent dark shaded box to get to the message page for your legislators. Write your personal message, insert your zip code and Kentucky home address, and the program will auto-fill your specific legislators. The last thing you do is push the “Send Message” button at the bottom right, and in less than three minutes you have helped and done your part in support of this important cause. If you also care to call your legislator, especially if you know them personally, please do that as well. If you don't have their personal number you can call 1-800-372-7181 to leave them a voicemail. But the email alone will be evidence of your support of HHR. The last thing we would ask you to do is to send the horseswork.com  link to anyone that you know supports the horse industry and who would send the same message to their legislator. We need thousands of messages to be sent to all legislators across the state, and need particular support in rural areas outside of Central Kentucky, so please recruit support of your family and friends. It is critical that our legislators hear directly from all of you this week, as they prepare to come back in session next week. Please help!

(If you have any problem sending the email, please email wglasscock@horseswork.com and specific directions will be forwarded to you to be sure your email is successfully sent and your voice is heard.)

The post Letter to the Editor: Save HHR and the Health of Ky Racing & Breeding appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Keeneland, Red Mile Temporarily Closing Historical Horse Racing Gaming Room

The Keeneland Association and Red Mile issued a joint statement on Sunday saying the two Lexington, Ky., companies were temporarily shutting down historical horse racing (HHR) gaming machines at The Red Mile harness track. The closure, which takes effect at the end of business on Sunday, comes in the wake of a decision last week by the Kentucky Supreme Court not to rehear the case in which the court found in favor of the Family Foundation by a 7-0 decision, saying Exacta Systems HHR games do not qualify as pari-mutuel wagering because wagers are pooled from multiple races that determine the outcome of a bet made at a specific machine.

“We were disappointed the Kentucky Supreme Court denied our petition for rehearing,” the statement said. “At this time, Keeneland and Red Mile have made the very difficult decision to temporarily close historical horse racing operations until there is more clarity surrounding the situation. We have confidence the Kentucky legislature will continue its efforts to protect jobs and state revenue generated by historical horse racing, as well as protect Kentucky's signature horse racing industry.”

Promotional materials from Red Mile Gaming & Racing indicate the facility has 138 themed HHR games on which to bet. Sixty-eight of those games are from Exacta, with the remaining machines distributed by Ainsworth and Parimax.

In the wake of the September Supreme Court ruling, Exacta officials said they would make software adjustments to meet the Supreme Court standards.

None of the other HHR operators in Kentucky have indicated they would shut down while awaiting legislative action. Churchill Downs Inc.'s Derby City Gaming in Louisville and Oak Grove Gaming and Racing in Christian County both use Ainsworth games, which were not in place when the Family Foundation suit was filed in 2012. Kentucky Downs in Franklin, Ky., the first track to embrace HHR, also remains open.

Historical horse racing has added millions of dollars to Kentucky purses annually since approved by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission in 2010.

The post Keeneland, Red Mile Temporarily Closing Historical Horse Racing Gaming Room appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Keeneland, Red Mile Announce Temporary Closure of Historical Horse Racing Operations

Keeneland Association and the Red Mile issued a joint press release Jan. 24 announcing the closure of historical horse race (HHR) gaming that the two tracks operate in partnership at the Red Mile harness track. The Sunday morning decision came three days after the Supreme Court of Kentucky ruled that it will not rehear an appealed Sept. 24 decision that told a lower court to re-examine the legality of the most crucial form of funding for purses in the commonwealth.

“We were disappointed the Kentucky Supreme Court denied our petition for rehearing,” the press release stated. “At this time, Keeneland and Red Mile have made the very difficult decision to temporarily close historical horse racing operations until there is more clarity surrounding the situation. We have confidence the Kentucky legislature will continue its efforts to protect jobs and state revenue generated by historical horse racing, as well as protect Kentucky's signature horse racing industry.”

An additional sentence was tacked on to that release on the home page of the Red Mile's website: “Red Mile will close at end of business on Sunday, January 24th. A reopening date has not been identified at this time.”

HHR handled $2.2 billion during the commonwealth's most recent fiscal year, and revenue from that form of gaming annually contributes tens of millions of dollars to the Kentucky purses. This form of gaming has been operational—but challenged by opponents in the courts as illegal—for the better part of a decade on the grounds that HHR does not meet the definition of pari-mutuel wagering.

In its September judgment, the Supreme Court ruled 7-0 that HHR machines made by Exacta Systems do not “create a wagering pool among patrons such that they are wagering among themselves as required for pari-mutuel wagering.”

Although the Supreme Court case only involves HHR machines made by Exacta Systems, whose machines are in use at the Red Mile, Kentucky Downs and Ellis Park, the gaming systems operate in broadly the same manner throughout Kentucky, meaning that a precedent established for one version is likely to affect all forms of HHR gaming.

Churchill Downs, Inc., which owns the tracks and gaming licenses associated with Kentucky's Churchill Downs and Turfway Park, has already halted reconstruction on its demolished Turfway grandstand, vowing late in 2020 not to continue until HHR's legality gets sorted out.

Although Thursday's Supreme Court decision was not entirely unexpected, it eliminated a judicial avenue for keeping HHR functional in Kentucky, making it clearer that getting HHR passed via new legislation remains the Thoroughbred industry's best path forward, according to some stakeholders.

But the Kentucky legislature only meets for 30 days in odd-numbered years, meaning that there is increased time pressure to take up the issue before the 2021 session ends Mar. 30.

The post Keeneland, Red Mile Announce Temporary Closure of Historical Horse Racing Operations appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Keeneland To Offer Drive Thru Betting On Kentucky Oaks, Derby Days

Keeneland's Drive Thru Betting will be open Friday, Sept. 4 and Saturday, Sept. 5 to accept wagers on the Kentucky Oaks (G1), Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (G1) and all the races on those two days from Churchill Downs.

Drive Thru Betting will be located behind the Keeneland Entertainment Center, which can be accessed via Gate 1 at Man o' War Boulevard. All patrons will complete a health screening and temperature check at Gate 1.

Keeneland will not be offering any other Oaks or Derby events except for Drive Thru Betting.

Click here for more information.

Here are additional details about Drive Thru Betting:

Kentucky Oaks Day – Friday, Sept. 4

· Drive Thru Betting will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Six windows will be available.

· Advance wagering for the Kentucky Derby full card and Oaks/Derby Double will be available.

· First post at Churchill is 11 a.m. Post time for the Oaks is 5:45 p.m.

· Full-card simulcasting programs are $4 each.

· A limited number of Kentucky Oaks souvenir programs will be available for $5 each.

· The Official Kentucky Derby Program will be available at noon for $6 each.

Kentucky Derby Day – Saturday, Sept. 5

· Drive Thru Betting will be open from 7 a.m. until the Derby post time (7:01 p.m.). Eight windows will be available.

· First post at Churchill is 11 a.m.

· Full-card simulcasting programs are $4 each.

· Official Kentucky Derby Programs are $6 each.

Keeneland Select always open

Fans also may wager on all the racing action from Churchill online through Keeneland Select, which enables players to watch and wager on racing from tracks around the world. Users earn lucrative rewards and support Keeneland's mission to invest in Thoroughbred racing. A portion of Keeneland Select's profits are reinvested in the sport through increased purses, fan development, player development and more. Click here for more information.

Red Mile simulcasting is available

At Red Mile, the historic harness track near downtown Lexington where Keeneland offers simulcast wagering, advance wagering on the Oaks and Derby cards begins Thursday, Sept. 3 at approximately 11:45 a.m.

Simulcasting is available on the second floor only. There is no reserved seating, and seating will be first come, first served. Seating is extremely limited due to social distancing guidelines, and all patrons must wear masks.

Parking and admission are free.

On Friday, Sept. 4, wagering on the Oaks card and advance wagering on the Derby card begins at 10 a.m.

On Derby Day, wagering at Red Mile will open at 10 a.m.

On both days, players who want to wager and leave will be able to “Park and Bet” by making their wagers trackside.

The post Keeneland To Offer Drive Thru Betting On Kentucky Oaks, Derby Days appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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