The Record (Troy, NY)

House approves bill to combat doping in racing

- By Matthew Daly Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) » The House approved a bill Tuesday to create national medication and safety standards for the horse racing industry as lawmakers move to clamp down on use of performanc­e-enhancing drugs that can lead to horse injuries and deaths.

The “Horseracin­g Integrity and Safety Act” comes after a series of doping scandals and a rash of horse fatalities in recent years. More than two dozen people were charged in March in what authoritie­s described as a widespread internatio­nal scheme to drug horses to make them run faster.

Jason Servis, whose champion horse Maximum Security crossed the finish line first at the 2019 Kentucky Derby before being disqualifi­ed for interferen­ce, was among those charged.

The Democrat-controlled House approved the bill by voice vote, sending it to the Senate,

where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, has co-sponsored similar legislatio­n. McConnell’s home state of Kentucky boasts some of the country’s top breeding outfits and Churchill Downs, site of the Kentucky Derby, the first leg of the fabled Triple Crown. Co-sponsors include senior Democrats from California and New York, which also have top racetracks and breeding operations.

Rep. Paul Tonko, D-N.Y., co-sponsored the House bill, calling it an overdue step to help restore public trust in the sport and “put

it on a path to a long and vital future.’’

“Horse racing has long been woven into the fabric of American culture,’’ Tonko said during House debate, citing storied names such as Secretaria­t and Man o’ War that “stir the imaginatio­n of racing fans” around the world.

Racing also serves as a major economic driver in many parts of the country, including New York, said Tonko, whose district includes the well-known Saratoga Race Course.

Even so, the sport in recent years has seen “the devastatin­g results that can occur when these equine athletes are pushed beyond their limits,’’ Tonko said.

Often aided by medication­s that can mask underlying

health issues, the same tragic story “has played out countless times across the country,” he said, citing a patchwork of medical and safety regulation­s that are uneven and often unenforced.

The House bill would empower an independen­t Horseracin­g Integrity and Safety Authority to set uniform, national standards for medication, track safety and testing of horses for performanc­e-enhancing drugs, or PEDs.

Tonko called the bill “a win for the industry, sports fans and equine athletes,’’ adding that it would put horses at their rightful place as the center of racing.

The legislatio­n is supported by a range of groups,

including The Jockey Club, the New York Racing Associatio­n and the Humane Society of the United States.

“Horse racing is experienci­ng the most profound crisis in the long history of the sport. To emerge stronger, we must act decisively to protect the horses who are the stars of the show, said Bob Baffert, a veteran trainer whose horse, Authentic, won this year’s Kentucky Derby.

“It is time for the horseracin­g industry to unite in support of a national antidoping regulatory system,” Baffert wrote in an op-ed in The Washington Post. “Nothing else will restore the confidence of fans, gamblers and the general public.”

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