New York Post

Are carriage horses really ‘retired’?

- By KATE BRIQUELET kbriquelet@nypost.com

The city is asleep at the reins when it comes to keeping track of retiring carriage horses, animal advocates charge.

Health Department records reveal more questions than answers — showing the whereabout­s of only a handful of the 260 Central Park horses that retired between 2009 and 2014.

A review of city documents, meanwhile, reveals that in that time period 225 horses “retired” or left the industry, 28 were sold and seven died.

In dozens of cases, horses weren’t registered as retired or dead until the DOH sent letters to drivers warning of expired licenses or missing health records.

“This is a clear example of the lawlessnes­s inherent in the carriageho­rse trade,” said Allie Feldman, executive director of NYCLASS. “And sadly, because of the lack of regulation­s, horses go missing all the time.”

Last month, activists hired a private eye to track Ceasar, an old horse that was supposed to be resting on a Pennsylvan­ia farm because of his chronic lung problems. The 22yearold nag went missing after the city probed driver Frank Luo for allegedly keeping him working past his prime under the license of a healthier steed.

Luo claims he shipped Ceasar out and sold him. Sources familiar with the private investigat­ion believe the horse has changed hands four times since then.

Based on witness statements, in vestigator­s are chasing leads that Ceasar could be in Iowa, a known transfer point for equines headed to slaughter.

A 2011 City Council bill would have required carriageho­rse drivers to notify the city of horses’ whereabout­s once they stopped working, but it never came to a vote. The legislatio­n also would have mandated that owners send the beasts to animal sanctuarie­s or welfare organizati­ons and provide the groups’ contact informatio­n.

Animalwelf­are activists told The Post drivers dump the horses without caring where they end up. If the steeds fall into a horse auction, they could be sold for their meat to middlemen for Canadian and Mexican slaughterh­ouses.

But carriage drivers threw manure on those claims. Stephen Ma lone says most retired horses — including his own — are donated to animal sanctuarie­s such as Massachuse­tts’ Blue Star Equicultur­e, which pays for their upkeep.

Drivers can also sell their retired mounts for a several thousand dollars because of their safe temperamen­ts.

Carriage operator Chantel Semanchik says it’s no one’s business what happens to the animals once they leave New York.

“If the city provided the stables, seed and hay, then the city can know where the horses go,” said Semanchik, who runs a carriage business in New Jersey and takes in retired Central Park ponies. “But these are privately owned animals. The owners have the right to do what they want.”

 ??  ?? UNSTABLE HOME: A carriage horse pulls its driver around Central Park in April. Activists say poor city record keeping puts the beasts in harm’s way.
UNSTABLE HOME: A carriage horse pulls its driver around Central Park in April. Activists say poor city record keeping puts the beasts in harm’s way.

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