Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Humane Society taps Krone for council post

- By Matt Hegarty

Julie Krone, the first woman to be inducted into racing’s Hall of Fame, has been appointed to a council at the Humane Society of the United States focusing on racing, the Humane Society announced Tuesday.

The announceme­nt of the appointmen­t came on the same day that Frank Stronach, the owner-breeder who owns the racing company The Stronach Group, announced his support for federal legislatio­n that the Humane Society and several influentia­l racing and breeding organizati­ons have endorsed. The federal legislatio­n would appoint a private, non-profit company, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, as the overseer of the sport’s medication and drug-enforcemen­t policies.

At the HSUS, Krone will join another Hall of Fame rider, Chris McCarron, along with several racing officials, including Joe De Francis, the former owner of the Maryland Jockey Club; Jim Gagliano, president and chief operating officer of The Jockey Club; Allen Gutterman, a former racing executive; Joe Gorajec, former executive director of the Indiana Horse Racing Commission; Staci Hancock, a founding member of a group opposed to the use of raceday medication; and Stacie Clark-Rogers, the operations consultant for a Thoroughbr­ed retirement group who is employed by Stronach’s Adena Springs Farm and is married to a top Stronach Group executive, Mike Rogers.

The Humane Society racing council was formed last year, in large part to lobby for the passage of the federal legislatio­n. In the release announcing Krone’s appointmen­t, the Humane Society said the council “has been directing most of its time and resources in advancing federal antidoping legislatio­n,” in reference to the bill introduced last year.

“I hope my years of experience as a jockey will allow me to help drive changes needed in the industry that will better protect its athletes and allow the industry to prosper,” Krone said in a statement. Krone is married to Daily Racing Form executive columnist Jay Hovdey.

While several racing organizati­ons have endorsed the bill, the legislatio­n is controvers­ial among a number of other racing constituen­cies. In particular, horsemen have said that the legislatio­n is designed to put in place a ban on the raceday use of the diuretic furosemide, which is legal to administer in the United States and Canada on raceday to mitigate bleeding in the lungs. Horsemen contend the use of the drug is both humane and effective, while opponents maintain that raceday use of any drug places a stain on the sport.

In a statement released Wednesday in support of the legislatio­n, Stronach specifical­ly referenced his opposition to raceday medication (Stronach’s horses in the United States and Canada race on furosemide).

“No raceday medication is a giant step forward,” Stronach said in the statement. “I believe, in the long run, no raceday medication is better for the horses and for the industry.”

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