Chicago Sun-Times

POST TIME GETTING CLOSER AT 2 TRACKS?

Hawthorne, Fairmount champing at the bit, but gov’s office says it’s still working on plan

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

Illinois’ struggling horse racing industry could be back off to the races as soon as next week without any spectators in attendance, but Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he’s not quite ready to pick up the starting bugle just yet.

The governor’s office said Wednesday evening it was in the home stretch of implementi­ng a plan to resume fan-free operations at the state’s three racetracks, with health protection­s in place for workers.

Hawthorne Race Course had already bolted from the starting gate, though, with the Illinois Harness Horsemen’s Associatio­n announcing the track in west suburban Stickney will reopen June 6 for drivers and trainers, but not railbirds.

They could be off and running even sooner at Fairmount Park in downstate Collinsvil­le, where the Illinois Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Associatio­n says they’ve gotten clearance for thoroughbr­ed racing to “resume as early as June 1.”

But there’s no plan yet for the action to resume at Arlington Internatio­nal Racecourse, which remains at loggerhead­s with the Illinois Thoroughbr­ed Horsemen’s Associatio­n on a contract for the season.

“We are thrilled to be racing again,” Harness Horsemen’s Associatio­n board president Clark Fairley said in a statement. “We’ve all been working without paychecks for the last few months. If we don’t race we don’t get paid, but we still have to work. Horses can’t take care of themselves.”

While Pritzker’s office said it would make an announceme­nt soon about reopening the tracks, the Democratic governor reined in optimism during an East St. Louis news conference earlier in the day.

“I don’t think it’ll restart on June 1. I think live horse racing will restart. I can’t tell you what date, but again, it will be like other spectator sports where it would have to run without spectators, at least to begin with,” Pritzker said.

“At least in the horse racing industry, that can be done. Most of the betting gets done not at the location of the horse race. Much of the handle, the dollars bet, are bet all over the world on races that occur in Illinois.”

And the industry is counting on horse players to do just that online. Industry leaders spent weeks hammering out safety precaution­s with the state department­s of Agricultur­e and Public Health to get the tracks up and running.

Besides barring fans from the grandstand, Hawthorne plans to limit entrants to licensed racing personnel, who are all required to wear face masks and gloves and are subject to temperatur­e checks.

Barns that usually hold up to 100 horses will be limited to 30, with at least one stall separating each. Paddocks and barns will be sprayed and disinfecte­d nightly. And at the conclusion of each race, the winner’s circle will be limited to the horse, driver and either the trainer or groom.

“There isn’t much person-toperson contact in the backstretc­h to begin with, and there is plenty of space to socially distance,” Fairley said. “We can’t afford to lose any more live racing, so everyone must be vigilant.”

After racing June 6-7, they say they’ll resume three nights per week at Hawthorne into September, with race winnings reduced 15%.

“This will be a very hard year for horsemen,” Fairley said. “But we hope that we have turned a corner. For now, we’re happy to be racing into the future.”

When it returns, horse racing will be the only game in town, as the state’s 10 casinos and 36,000plus video gaming terminals remain shut down indefinite­ly by the Illinois Gaming Board.

Arlington remains shuttered, too. The track announced Wednesday it suspended its opening races of the season “in support of, and with respect to” Pritzker’s phased reopening plan.

That drew the ire of thoroughbr­ed trainers, who said Arlington’s “contempt for Illinois workers and the best interests of taxpayers knows no bounds.”

Arlington president Tony Petrillo told the Illinois Racing Board last week they haven’t considered pulling the plug on the entire racing season, but that running without spectators “was not possible” without the off-track betting network up and fully operationa­l.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Hawthorne Race Course says it will reopen June 6 for drivers and trainers.
SUN-TIMES FILES Hawthorne Race Course says it will reopen June 6 for drivers and trainers.

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