22K Additional H-2B Visas Available for Second Half of Fiscal Year

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Department of Labor issued a joint temporary final rule published Tuesday in the Federal Register that offers 22,000 additional H-2B visas to employers for the second half of the federal fiscal year that ends Sept. 30, 2021. The visas, used by employers such as racehorse trainers seeking seasonal guest workers, are capped at 66,000 annually, with an even split of 33,000 available for each half of the federal government's fiscal year. Six thousand of these supplemental visas will be reserved for nationals of the Northern Triangle countries of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.

“The 22,000 H-2B visas offered through this rule issued by the DHS and DOL will be helpful to employers who rely on the H-2B visa program, including trainers, but many more of these visas are ultimately required to satisfy the need,” said NTRA President and CEO Alex Waldrop. “For that reason, the NTRA, through its involvement in the H-2B Workforce Coalition, supports additional relief from the burdensome annual H-2B visa cap through a permanent returning worker exemption.”

The H-2B visa guest worker program is a nonimmigrant visa program which trainers rely heavily on to fill various backside positions. Demand for H-2B visas often exceeds their availability and the cap level is quickly reached, leaving employers in need. Employers can find eligibility and filing details here.

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John T. L. Jones IV Passes Away

John Tullis Ledbetter “Tullis” Jones IV, passed away Wednesday, May 19, 2021, in Austin, Texas. He was 31 years old.

Jones was born October, 30, 1989, in Houston, Texas, the son of Johnny Jones III and Mia Edgar Jones.

Jones attended St. John's School and Episcopal High School in Houston, Texas, where he excelled in basketball and golf, and graduated from Transylvania University in Lexington, where he was a member of the Kappa Alpha (KA) fraternity.

After graduating from school, Tullis sold property and casualty insurance in Austin and Houston.

He was preceded in death by his grandfather and grandmother, Walmac Farm's John T.L. Jones Jr. and Janice Marie Jones, of Lexington, and his grandfather and grandmother Edgar, Charles Richard Edgar and Mary Ann Edgar, of Houston.

Survivors include his parents; his brother John Michiel Christian Jones; his aunts and uncles John and Pauline Edgar of Houston; Paula and Hutton Jones of Abilene, Texas; Paula and Levi Jones of Shawnee, Oklahoma; and Julie and Guy Mogge of Versailles, Kentucky; as well as cousins Hutton Jones, Payton Jones, Haley Winn, Helen Heffner,  Bryce Jones, Ellis Jones, and Guy David Mogge.

A memorial service for Jones will be held Thursday, May 27, at 3 p.m. at St Paul's United Methodist Church, Main Street, in Houston, with a celebration wake following from 4.30 p.m. until 6.30 p.m. at Armando's on Westheimer Road.  A memorial service in Kentucky will be held Wednesday June 2 at 4 p.m. at Walnut Hill Church, Walnut Hill Road in Lexington, with a celebration wake to follow at the church.

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John Hall, Longtime Taylor Made Yearling Manager, Dies After Cancer Battle

John A. Hall, the longtime yearling manager at Taylor Made Farm and a member of one of New England's most prominent Thoroughbred racing families, died May 22 after fighting cancer for several years.

Frank Taylor, the vice president of boarding operations at Taylor Made, who worked closely with Hall, confirmed the death to TDN Monday. He said Hall died at his Delaware home in the presence of his wife and family members after receiving hospice care.

Hall's age was unavailable and funeral information was not yet complete.

“John was just the best–a great human being. He was so 'other-person' centered,” Taylor said. “He was a tremendous mentor who was always guiding and helping other people, and he became like a second dad to a lot of people. He was a super-good horseman, full of wisdom, and a very spiritual and faithful guy. He passed that along to a lot of people. He was just a godsend to Taylor Made.”

Hall was raised in Massachusetts, where his father, Norman, was a professional show horse rider, a huntsman for the Norfolk Hunt Club, and later a judge at the National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden. Norman switched the focus of his family's horse business to Thoroughbreds in the 1940s, becoming a noted regional breeder just as racing was expanding throughout New England. For decades after his death in 1989, the Norman Hall S. for Massachusetts-breds was run annually in his honor at Suffolk Downs.

John and his three siblings grew up surrounded by horses and immersed in the racing business. His late sister Carol was the first female to receive a license as an exercise rider on New England tracks in the early 1950s. His brother Pete was a veterinarian based at Monmouth Park for over 25 years before joining the Keeneland selections team. Another brother, Bill, became a geophysicist.

John Hall was a fixture himself in Massachusetts horse racing. But 25 years ago he took a chance at venturing to Kentucky when presented with a job offer from Taylor Made, with whom he had a long-standing relationship as a client.

Taylor said Hall initially accepted the position for a year to see if he'd like it. He ended up staying, getting promoted to various positions, and becoming a part of the Taylor Made family for the rest of his life.

As yearling manager, Hall helped raise numerous prominent horses at Taylor Made, including 2015 Triple Crown champ American Pharoah.

In 2016, Hall was named as a finalist in the Farm Leadership Award category of the United States Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards. He was a finalist again in 2018, in the Breeding Leadership Award category.

“In 1996, I had a chance to go to Kentucky and work for Taylor Made, and it was a dream come true for me,” Hall said in a video profile for the first of those award nominations. “To deal with those kinds of horses, it was a great opportunity. What I enjoyed the most about being in Kentucky was the horse comes first. No matter what else is going on, that's the most important thing in your life.”

Taylor said Hall had semi-retired several years ago, moving from Kentucky to Delaware, but remaining active for Taylor Made in bloodstock investments, picking out weanlings to sell as yearlings.

Taylor noted that the bloodstock investments team that Hall was a part of ended up having four horses it selected run in the last five GI Kentucky Derbies.

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Visit Horse Country Adds TRF Farm to its Membership

The board of directors of Horse Country voted unanimously to add the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation's Chestnut Hall facility in Prospect, Kentucky to its membership roster.

“Since our first tours in 2015, the members of our not-for-profit organization have opened their gates to more than 150,000 leisure travelers, fans, clubs and schools in service of our mission of fan development for racing and equine sport,” said Anne Sabatino Hardy, executive director of Horse Country. “Aftercare is a critical part of the story of racing and experiential storytelling is an effective and compelling way to share our love of the horse, land and people. While we've supported TRF in previous endeavors, we're happy this new program allows us to welcome them to membership.”

Chestnut Hall represents the realization of a dream of local businessman, Bill Carstanjen, CEO of Churchill Downs Inc. to preserve the historic farmland. Carstanjen oversaw the restoration of the 25+ acre property to an active horse farm and sought out the TRF as his partner to provide a home for retired racehorses.

Among the small herd of retired Thoroughbreds who will welcome tour guests at Chestnut Hall is graded stakes winner Warrior's Club (Warrior's Reward). The 7-year-old, who won the 2018 GIII Commonwealth S. for the Churchill Downs Racing Club, will retire to the facility thanks to a grant from the club.

Chestnut Hall is the fourth TAA-accredited aftercare organization to join Horse Country. Tours are now offered at https://visithorsecountry.com/trf-chestnut-hall/ or https://www.trfinc.org/trf-sanctuary-farm-at-chestnut-hall/.

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