Horse racing experts gathered at a 蜜柚直播 resort on Tuesday to discuss the changes being made throughout the sport after a series of high-profile equine deaths. They all agreed that while improvements and oversight will come at a significant expense, they鈥檙e critical to the future of horse racing.
The panel on racing safety and welfare initiatives was one of several offered at the 46th Annual Global Symposium on Racing, a two-day event held at Loews Ventana Canyon.
The symposium is hosted by the University of 蜜柚直播鈥檚 Race Track Industry Program, widely believed to be among the best in the country.
More than 500 racehorses have died this year, with 24 of the deaths occurring at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, according to The 蜜柚直播 Republic. Turf Paradise is among the racetracks that are prioritizing the horses鈥 welfare, whether it鈥檚 by checking and maintaining the racing surface, hiring private veterinarians to oversee entries or limiting the medications a horse can take before racing.
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Although injuries, some of them fatal, are inherent in horse racing, Tuesday鈥檚 panelists agreed the industry can still do better.
The sport鈥檚 future depends on it.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 make these investments, horse racing will not survive鈥
As deaths at California鈥檚 Santa Anita Park piled up last spring, making national headlines and sparking outrage, the track鈥檚 management group realized that it had to act fast, Dr. Dionne Benson, the Stronach Group鈥檚 Chief Veterinary Officer, said Tuesday. The Stronach Group oversees Santa Anita and five other racetracks throughout the United States.
Benson said 30 horses have died at Santa Anita since December 2018, and an investigation into their deaths is still in the hands of the California Horse Racing Board and the Los Angeles District Attorney. Deaths are fairly common 鈥 18 horses died at Santa Anita in all of 2018 鈥 but times are changing, and that number of fatalities no longer sits well with the public, Benson said.
In the spring, the Stronach Group took action, creating Benson鈥檚 position and rolling out several bold changes in the areas of horse racing and training. New rules limit how many days prior to a race day specific types of medications can be administered.
Jockeys will soon be told when they can 鈥 and can鈥檛 鈥 use riding crops.
鈥淥ne of the things that was made abundantly clear was that the public does not like the use of the whip,鈥 Benson said.
Santa Anita and other tracks are also using private veterinarians rather than those traditionally employed by the track. The private vets at Santa Anita decide whether horses can race.
A new five-person governor鈥檚 review panel evaluates entries, has the power to 鈥渟cratch鈥 horses deemed unfit to race and can require others to seek an additional veterinary exam or more review. The new oversights have led to between one and five horses per race being scratched each day, Benson said.
Horses have been dying during training as well, and so similar changes have been made to the training side. Santa Anita brought in new medical technology to quickly and accurately diagnose fetlock injuries, which 鈥 while not fatal on their own 鈥 often result in euthanasia.
The changes were implemented in April, and the results have been staggering. There have been just six deaths since, a sizable reduction from the 23 fatalities that took place between December 2018 and last March. The track does not include one sudden death that occurred during that time period.
鈥淲e can no longer say it鈥檚 a financial disincentive to save that horse and do that surgery,鈥 Benson said.
鈥淲e have to spend the money. Every horse has to be treated if it can have a comfortable and humane retirement.鈥
The Stronach Group has invested $500,000 in medical technology at Santa Anita, part of a $3 million project.
The group is also spending close to $1 million per region on veterinary staffing, Benson said.
The Stronach Group is still looking at new ways to improve horse health and safety, as should other industry professionals, Benson said, since the events that happened at Santa Anita could easily happen at any other track.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 make these investments, horse racing will not survive,鈥 Benson said.
鈥淔or the integrity of our product, 鈥 we had to do the right thing鈥
If the events at Santa Anita represented the worst moments for horse racing in 2019, the resurrection of the once-shuttered Colonial Downs Racetrack in Virginia was no doubt the bright spot. The track had been closed for six years before it reopened in August.
鈥淚t didn鈥檛 happen by accident. A lot went into bringing racing back to the state of Virginia,鈥 said Jill Byrne, the track鈥檚 vice president of racing operations.
Byrne was proactive when she arrived at Colonial Downs. She started by setting fire to the track鈥檚 famous turf, freeing up the soil so it could absorb much-needed nutrients.
鈥淓verything starts for me with the surface, because that鈥檚 where your horses are running,鈥 Byrne said. Colonial Downs also implemented pre-race and race day protocols; it also brought in state-employed veterinarians.
The veterinarians 鈥渇lag鈥 horses that show warning signs, keeping them from racing or training.
鈥淔or the integrity of our product, especially being a new product, we had to do the right thing,鈥 Byrne said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have the luxury of starting off on the wrong foot.鈥
Like Santa Anita, Colonial Downs implemented new rules about medication and crop use. Track stewards spoke to the jockeys before each race to let them know Colonial Downs鈥 expectations and what would be tolerated, Byrne said.

Alan Foreman, chairman and CEO of Thoroughbred Horseman鈥檚 Association, talks about the 鈥淢id-Atlantic Strategic Plan to reduce equine fatalities鈥 during a speakers panel on horse racing safety at the University of 蜜柚直播鈥檚 46th annual Global Symposium on Racing at Loews Ventana Canyon Resort, 7000 N. Resort Dr., 蜜柚直播, Ariz. on December 10th, 2019. Speakers informed attendees about the health risks involved in horse racing, such as veterinary care and poor race tracks, and how those problems could be fixed.
The proactive approach and attention to detail paid off: There were zero fatalities at Colonial Downs during its inaugural season, which ran from Aug. 10 through Sept. 7.
鈥淎 lot of that could be based upon luck,鈥 Byrne conceded. 鈥淏ut a lot of hard work went into this.鈥
鈥淥ur top priority is the safety and welfare of the horse鈥
This isn鈥檛 the first rash of horse deaths in the sport. But experts are hoping it can be the last.
Alan Foreman, CEO and chairman of the Thoroughbred Horsemen鈥檚 Association, talked Tuesday about the fatalities that occurred during the 2011-12 racing season at Aqueduct racetrack in New York. He was part of a three-person panel charged with investigating 21 horse deaths there; the panel came up with 38 reform recommendations that were adopted by the state, and then by the mid-Atlantic thoroughbred racing industry.
Between 2013 and 2018, there was a 35% reduction in fatalities in the mid-Atlantic region, Foreman said. This spring, the Mid-Atlantic Strategic Plan to Reduce Equine Fatalities, modeled after the 2012 task force report, was enacted. It addresses veterinary practices and procedures, adopts a mortality review board, develops protocols for racing surface and weather monitoring and adopts medication regulations and testing, among other things. A coalition of 35 organizations have committed to the strategic plan, including each of the seven state鈥檚 racing commissions and all participating racetracks, Foreman said.
鈥淥ur top priority is the safety and welfare of the horse,鈥 Foreman said. 鈥淚 feel good about what we鈥檙e doing in the mid-Atlantic and I feel good about what we鈥檙e doing in the industry.鈥
The deaths at Santa Anita reminded the public of the risks inherent in horse racing.
While the fatality rate per start equates to roughly 0.2%, that number is still too high, Foreman said.
鈥淲ill we ever get to zero? I don鈥檛 know, but we can certainly do better,鈥 Foreman said.