The Palm Beach Post

Industry to fight greyhound racing ban OK’d for ballot

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida voters will be asked this fall to ban greyhound racing, a staple for decades of the state’s gambling industry.

After repeated and heavily lobbied legislativ­e debates in recent years about the future of the greyhound industry, the Florida Constituti­on Revision Commission on Monday voted 27-10 to put the proposed ban on the Nov. 6 ballot.

However, before the measure appears on the ballot, the industry plans to challenge the proposed constituti­onal amendment in court, said Jack Cory, a lobbyist for the Florida Greyhound Associatio­n.

Attorney General Pam Bondi, who has made dog-adoption efforts part of the opening of each state Cabinet meeting, called greyhound racing and the treatment of the dogs a “black eye on our state.”

“We all know these dogs end up with broken legs, serious injuries and they’re shipped from track to track until they’re dead or can no longer race at all,” said Bondi, who is a member of the Constituti­on Revision Commission.

After the vote, Cory said the proposal was advanced through “a misreprese­ntation of facts” and said it will “impact 3,000 jobs.”

Cory also disputed Bondi’s descriptio­n of how dogs are treated and her claims that dogs would be adopted.

“That’s why you don’t put stuff like this in the constituti­on,” Cory added. “If you make a mistake and misreprese­nt the facts, you can come back and fix it. You can’t fix a constituti­onal amendment without extraordin­ary measures.”

Commission­er Chris Smith, a former state senator from Fort Lauderdale who voted against the proposal, argued the measure should remain an issue for the Legislatur­e, equating the proposal to a 2002 amendment that put the treatment of pregnant pigs into the Constituti­on.

“We’re adding more and more and more things to this ballot, and at some point, we’ve got to say we have a Legislatur­e for a reason,” Smith said.

The measure was one of eight proposed constituti­onal amendments that the 37-member commission approved for the Nov. 6 ballot. The measures will need approval from 60 percent of voters to pass.

If the greyhound-racing proposal is approved, the measure would phase out racing by 2020.

Bondi noted that of the 18 greyhound tracks in the nation, 12 are in Florida.

The measure would allow people to continue to bet at pari-mutuel facilities on greyhound races simulcast from other states.

State Sen. Tom Lee, a Thonotosas­sa Republican who sponsored the proposal, said allowing betting on races from elsewhere was needed for the measure to advance.

“If you eliminate the simulcasti­ng ability, you impair the revenue stream for these organizati­ons, it creates an economic hardship for them, and the house of cards comes down,” Lee said.

During past legislativ­e debates about curbing greyhound racing, representa­tives of breeders and owners have argued, in part, that such moves would lead to job losses.

Commission­er Arthenia Joyner, a former state senator from Tampa who also voted against the proposal, said more effort is needed from state lawmakers to ensure people don’t lose their ability to make a living.

“I don’t want to deny or take away a person’s right to earn a living, when there is a solution, short of putting it in the constituti­on,” Joyner said.

However, Commission­er Don Gaetz, said the problem is that state lawmakers have been unable to act on various issues about greyhound racing.

“We’ve tried to get bills passed on injury reporting. We’ve tried to get bills passed on doping,” said Gaetz, a former state Senate president from Niceville. “And every time we have, there are fine and good people in this industry, but the mass of the industry has come forward with their lobbyists to do everything they could to stop them from reforming themselves and stop the reasonable regulation of the industry.”

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