Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Reins tight on horse massages

Move afoot in Nebraska to loosen up on licensing rules

- TESS WILLIAMS

LINCOLN, Neb. — There are plenty of options for people looking for a massage in Nebraska, but if you’re a horse, you’re out of luck.

Nebraska doesn’t have a single licensed equine massage therapist, and lawmakers who recently chipped away at regulation­s governing various other profession­s blame the dearth on an expensive and rigorous process that even includes the prospect of jail time for violators.

“It flies in the face of reason that you need that much more education just to massage a horse,” said Karen Hough, a rural Nebraskan who is unable to massage horses because of the regulation­s.

Horse massage sounds quirky, but it’s a common practice in much of the country for high-performanc­e horses, helping to increase their range of motion and relieve tension.

Under the measure being debated in the Legislatur­e, Nebraska would join 13 other states that don’t require licenses for massaging horses. Most of the others don’t have the per capita horse count that’s in Nebraska, where there are an estimated 150,000 horses — about one for every 12 citizens.

While horse massage is the current focus in Nebraska, it’s part of a larger national trend — particular­ly in Republican­controlled states — to reduce barriers to licensing, said Suzanne Hultin from the National Council of State Legislatur­es. In the 1950s, about one job out of 20 in the U.S. required a license. Today, around one out of every four profession­s is licensed, she said. Five states now don’t even require licenses to massage humans.

Nebraska has about 200 profession­s that require state licenses, ranging from potato shippers and athletic trainers to elevator repair technician­s and doctors. On average, each state has about 90 licensed profession­s. The horse massage bill, sponsored by Republican state Sen. Mike Groene, is part of a multiyear bipartisan effort to reduce licensing requiremen­ts across a range of profession­s.

Obtaining an equine massage therapist license in Nebraska requires a veterinari­an degree or completion of 1,000 hours of classes to become a licensed human massage therapist and an additional 150 class hours to receive an animal therapist license. No Nebraska schools offer the needed animal therapy courses.

Hough took equine massage therapy courses from a Colorado company and for five years massaged horses at her isolated central Nebraska farm, about 250 miles west of Omaha. She charged $30 for each massage.

In 2012, the Department of Health and Human Services issued Hough a cease-and-desist notice after she called the agency to learn about becoming licensed. She was told she would have to stop massaging horses or face up to 20 years in prison and a $25,000 fine. She stopped doing the work and set out on what has become a seven-year quest to create new regulation­s.

“The kids were disappoint­ed I couldn’t massage their horses anymore,” Hough said. “So I told them, ‘In America, we don’t break the law, we change it!’”

Opponents of the change, however, argue that without proper education therapists could harm the animal or miss an underlying health problem. The American Massage Therapy Associatio­n and several animal chiropract­ors have signed up in opposition to the bill.

Dr. Brett Speece said the bill is needed to create standardiz­ation for the profession. He traveled out of state to take courses required to become a licensed animal therapist and now performs chiropract­ic on animals in southeast Nebraska. He said going through a massage therapy program for humans is part of a necessary process that sets an educationa­l foundation for practice needed to “protect the clients, both animals and people.”

Those concerns don’t sway Groene, who argued that in a state where horses generate an estimated $700 million annually in supplies and services, it doesn’t make sense to restrict equine massage.

“It’s an industry,” he said. “They eat a lot of oats, they do a lot of business with veterinari­ans, but they can’t find a masseuse in the state of Nebraska. This is serious. It’s affecting our ag economy.”

 ?? AP/NATI HARNIK ?? Jane Fucinaro works with 9-year-old Wakema during an equine body work session in Blair, Neb., earlier this month.
AP/NATI HARNIK Jane Fucinaro works with 9-year-old Wakema during an equine body work session in Blair, Neb., earlier this month.

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