Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

CHESCO POLS, RESIDENTS OPPOSE ‘RAIDING’ RACE HORSE FUND

Chester county residents testify to preserve ‘legacy’ of race horses

- By Jen Samuel jsamuel@dailylocal.com @jenpoetess on Twitter

HARRISBURG » Chester County residents traveled to the state Capitol Wednesday morning to deliver testimony for the “love and passion” of race horses.

The House of Representa­tives Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee held a public hearing in the lower level of the state House to discuss Gov. Tom Wolf’s proposal to divert money from the Pennsylvan­ia Race Horse Developmen­t Fund to pay for a new scholarshi­p program.

Speakers included Heather Hunter, thoroughbr­ed breeder of Spinnaker Hill Farm in London Grove Township near West Grove, Brian Sanfratell­o, executive secretary of the Pennsylvan­ia Horse Breeders Associatio­n.

“The trust fund is not taxpayers’ dollars,” said Russell Williams of Hanover Shoe Farms. He is president of the U.S. Trotting Associatio­n and a member of the Standardbr­ed Breeders Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia in Hanover.

To relieve college debt for students attending state schools, Gov. Tom Wolf proposed earlier this month to take money from the Race Horse Developmen­t Trust Fund, establishe­d in 2004 the passage of the Pennsylvan­ia Race Horse Developmen­t and Gaming Act, which was implemente­d in 2006.

However, since the creation

of the trust, Brian Sanfratell­o, executive secretary of the Kennett Squarebase­d Pennsylvan­ia Horse Breeders Associatio­n, said that 90 percent of the money earned annually by the industry gets reinvested into Pennsylvan­ia.

“It is where the horse lives,” Sanfratell­o said. He told lawmakers the race horse industry brings in $1.6 million into the commonweal­th’s economy annually.

“Let us continue to make that it happen,” Sanfratell­o said.

Ultimately, the public testimony gained the bipartisan support of committee members.

“It’s our heritage,” said state Rep. Christina Sappey, D-158th, of West Bradford, referring to horses and the people who care for them. “They are our heritage in Chester County. Agricultur­e — equine agricultur­e — is our legacy. It is so important to protect this.”

“There’s going to be a potential loss,” said Sec. Russell Redding, Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e, at the hearing.

Hunter called the situation a ‘flood.’

“It’s devastatin­g,” she said during her formal testimony to lawmakers.

Rep. David Zimmerman, R-99th, of Lancaster County, said funds for agricultur­e should stay in agricultur­e.

“We are pitting industries against each other,” said Rep. Clint Owlett, R68th, of Tioga County.

“I have a problem with raiding dedicated funds which the Legislatur­e has agreed to as a priority, I have a problem with us going back and raiding them to fill budget holes,” Sappey said. “Especially when we give over $500 million away in tax credits annually. We need to take a look at how we give tax credits.”

She added of the Race Horse Developmen­t Trust Fund, “This is not taxpayer dollars.”

The money for the trust fund comes from a slot machine revenue tax at Pennsylvan­ia casinos.

Wolf’s proposal would take $200 million from an estimated $250 million fund for equine agricultur­e to be moved to a fund to combat student debt for individual­s attending state colleges or universiti­es.

Rep. John Lawrence, R13th, of West Grove, called the move a “raid.”

The funds are considered “repurposin­g revenues” from the annual Horse Racing Developmen­t Trust Fund, according to the governor’s office.

The scholarshi­p, called the Nellie Bly Scholarshi­p Program, would apply after a student’s Pell Grant and other state grants to enroll in one of the 14 Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education (PASSHE) universiti­es, according to the governor’s office.

To be eligible, students must enroll full-time in a PASSHE undergradu­ate program and qualify for a federal subsidized student loan. Students must commit to live in Pennsylvan­ia after graduation for the same number of years they received the scholarshi­p, as previously reported in the Daily Local News. If a student leaves the state early, they must repay the money.

Rep. Eddie Day Pashinski, D-121st, of Luzerne County, vice president of the committee, called the testimony on behalf of the race horse industry one of “love and passion.”

 ?? JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? From left, Todd Mostoller, executive director, Pennsylvan­ia Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Associatio­n; state Rep. Rich Irvin of the 81st district; Rep. John Lawrence of the 13th district; horse advocate Heather Hunter of London Grove Township, David Zimmerman of the 99th district and Christina Sappey of the 158th district take a moment to talk horses after the Pennsylvan­ia Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee public hearing on Feb. 26.
JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP From left, Todd Mostoller, executive director, Pennsylvan­ia Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Associatio­n; state Rep. Rich Irvin of the 81st district; Rep. John Lawrence of the 13th district; horse advocate Heather Hunter of London Grove Township, David Zimmerman of the 99th district and Christina Sappey of the 158th district take a moment to talk horses after the Pennsylvan­ia Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee public hearing on Feb. 26.
 ?? JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Heather Hunter of London Grove testifies in Harrisburg on Wednesday on behalf of the equine agricultur­e industry as Philadelph­ia horse trainer Kate Demasi looks on.
JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP Heather Hunter of London Grove testifies in Harrisburg on Wednesday on behalf of the equine agricultur­e industry as Philadelph­ia horse trainer Kate Demasi looks on.
 ?? JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Sec. Russell Redding, Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e, speaks at a public hearing on Wednesday for the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee.
JEN SAMUEL — MEDIANEWS GROUP Sec. Russell Redding, Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e, speaks at a public hearing on Wednesday for the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee.

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