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Sen. Feinstein Calls For A Moratorium on Horse Racing at Santa Anita

Screenshot KTLA 5 Los Angeles

ARCADIA (CNS) - California Sen. Dianne Feinstein yesterday (Monday) called for a moratorium on horse racing at Santa Anita Race Track, a day after a third horse died at the racetrack in the past 10 days.
   ``How many more horses must die before concrete steps are taken to address what is clearly an acute problem,'' Feinstein said. ``I once again call for an immediate moratorium on racing at Santa Anita. We need a thorough investigation of practices and conditions at the track before any more races are held.
   ``I believe we need to carefully review what medications horses are given and under what circumstances as well as take a close look at the issues of overrunning horses, which may be contributing to deaths,'' Feinstein added.
   Feinstein's demand for the moratorium follows Sunday's demand from animal rights activists calling for the abolishment of horse racing in California
   Several opposition groups held a joint demonstration outside the famed
Arcadia track today before scheduled races, calling for a ballot measure or
legislation that would prohibit the sport statewide.
   Santa Anita officials said they have no plans to suspend racing and
insisted that their track is safe, pointing to recent reforms at the track and
emphasizing that no horses died there for seven weeks of racing prior to the
three recent deaths.
   ``The track is safe, let's be very clear right up front,'' Stefan
Friedman, a spokesman for The Stronach Group, which owns Santa Anita, told KTLA
5. ``Until last week, you had seven weeks of racing without a single
catastrophic injury. That is an incredible statistic that has been unseen in a
very long time.
   ``The reforms that we're putting into place here are nothing short of
historic. We have to see how they work, and they are working, by and large.
We're talking about medication reform, we're talking about technological reform
and people who are not following the rules here are not going to be welcome
here,'' Friedman said.
   On Sunday, a 9-year-old gelding named Kochees was put down after
suffering a leg injury during a race the previous day. Kochees was the 26th
horse to die at Santa Anita since the track's racing season opened on Dec. 26.
Mike Willman, Santa Anita's director of publicity, said ``every effort was made
to save the animal.''
   ``I want someone to take charge of this and say, let the voters
decide,'' Heather Wilson, an organizer with Horseracing Wrongs -- a New York-
based nonprofit working to eradicate horse racing in the United States -- told
City News Service.
   Wilson said her group and other activists would like to get an
initiative on California's ballot, but doing so ``costs millions,'' which can
be cost-prohibitive for groups comprising mostly volunteers. She would be just
as happy to see one or more state lawmakers take up the issue and push a law
through the Legislature.
   ``We are not just standing out here holding signs yelling at people in
the pouring rain, we are also looking at top-down tactics, changing the
law,'' Wilson said. ``We're hitting every angle that we can.''
   She stressed that her group and the others demonstrating Monday have
no involvement with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which is
working to reform -- not ban -- horse racing.
   ``They're doing their own thing,'' she said.
   On Sunday, PETA released the following statement from Senior Vice
President Kathy Guillermo:
   ``Santa Anita and all California tracks must suspend racing until the
ongoing investigation by the district attorney is complete and the new rules
have been strengthened. Decreasing the number of broken bones is not enough.
PETA and Social Compassion in Legislation are currently working with The
Stronach Group and the California Horse Racing Board to enact new regulations
and laws to stop all deaths. Nothing short of a zero-fatality rate is
acceptable.''
   Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey has announced the
creation of a task force to investigate the deaths of the horses at the track.
And in a letter to the California Horse Racing Board on April 2, California
Sen. Dianne Feinstein called for racing to be suspended at the track ``until
the cause or causes of these deaths can be fully investigated.''
   The California Horse Racing Board -- the state agency charged with
regulating the sport, said today in a statement that ``there is currently an
ongoing investigation into some of the fatalities and it would therefore be
inappropriate for the California Horse Racing Board to discuss the current
situation.
   ``The Board regrets the loss of any horse,'' the board said. ``We are
committed to working with the entire California horse racing industry in the
protection of horses and riders. Information regarding safety initiatives
currently in place, including those recently implemented at Santa Anita, is
available on the CHRB website.''
 

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