leather pants
FAQ
Szukaj
Użytkownicy
Grupy
Galerie
Rejestracja
Profil
Zaloguj się, by sprawdzić wiadomości
Zaloguj
Forum leather pants Strona Główna
->
leather pants
Napisz odpowiedź
Użytkownik
Temat
Treść wiadomości
Emotikony
Więcej Ikon
Kolor:
Domyślny
Ciemnoczerwony
Czerwony
Pomarańćzowy
Brązowy
Żółty
Zielony
Oliwkowy
Błękitny
Niebieski
Ciemnoniebieski
Purpurowy
Fioletowy
Biały
Czarny
Rozmiar:
Minimalny
Mały
Normalny
Duży
Ogromny
Zamknij Tagi
Opcje
HTML:
TAK
BBCode
:
TAK
Uśmieszki:
TAK
Wyłącz HTML w tym poście
Wyłącz BBCode w tym poście
Wyłącz Uśmieszki w tym poście
Kod potwierdzający: *
Wszystkie czasy w strefie EET (Europa)
Skocz do:
Wybierz forum
Jakaś kategoria
----------------
leather pants
Przegląd tematu
Autor
Wiadomość
zvswgogna
Wysłany: Śro 16:21, 08 Sty 2014
Temat postu: Proposed Kentucky ban on race
Proposed Kentucky ban on race
At a regular monthly meeting, commission members on Wednesday voted down a motion to delay the issue for a year. A public hearing will be held next month in Frankfort.
The proposal would phase out raceday use of the drug furosemide in graded or listed stakes races, including the Kentucky Derby. The drug is used commonly to treat pulmonary hemorrhaging in racehorses.
A more sweeping proposed ban aimed at completely phasing out use of furosemide on race days failed on a 77 roll call vote at a tense commission meeting last month. The commission has since added a new member, Lexington horseman John Phillips.
The proposed ban remained divisive when it came up for discussion before the Equine Drug Research Council, an advisory group for the Horse Racing Commission that met before the full commission meeting. A motion to support the proposed regulation narrowly failed after speakers most of them opponents of the ban had their say.
''I've seen horses that have collapsed on the racetrack in pools of blood. . . . It's not a pretty sight,'' said opponent Rick Hiles, a council member and president of the Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent Protective Association.
But state Sen. Damon Thayer, a Georgetown Republican also on the council, said a raceday ban on the medication would help the entire horse racing industry.
John T. Ward, the commission's executive director, said Lasix has become ''the golden shot'' administered when horses race or work out. But he said there's a growing public perception that racehorses are overly medicated.
Ward, a veteran thoroughbred trainer, said the racing industry would adjust to the raceday furosemide prohibition.
Opponents of the earlier proposal said the raceday ban would saddle Kentucky with a competitive disadvantage that would drive away trainers and horses. Kentucky racetracks already are struggling to keep up with competitors in other states where purse money is bolstered by slot machines and other forms of gambling. Kentucky lawmakers have refused to allow casinostyle gambling at the state's racetracks.
Threetime Kentucky Derby winning trainer Bob Baffert told The Associated Press in an interview that the proposed ban would hurt racing and the horses. He said he gives Lasix as a preventative against bleeding.
''Once they bleed, they just keep bleeding and it's hard to really stop,'' he said.
Baffert said the horsemen who have problems with raceday use of Lasix could just stop administering the drug at those times.
But he said a ban on raceday use of the drug would put horses at a disadvantage if they bled.
''You don't know which ones are going to bleed,'' he said.
The new proposal would gradually ban the use of furosemide within 24 hours of post time in any graded or stakes races in Kentucky. Those races draw topnotch horses because of the higher purse money offered.
The new version would begin on Jan. 1, 2013, when the ban would apply to 2yearolds racing in any graded or stakes races in Kentucky. The prohibition would extend to 2 and 3yearold horses competing in those races in 2014.
The Kentucky Derby, run the first Saturday of May at Churchill Downs in Louisville, is for 3yearold horses.
Then in 2015, the ban would apply to any horse entered to race in graded or listed stakes races in Kentucky.
The phasein could reshuffle fields in some horse races in 2014, when the ban would apply to 3yearolds but not to older horses.
Violations of the raceday drug ban would result in the horse being disqualified and forfeiture of their purse money.
''That is a heavy penalty to pay,'' Ward said. ''The owner takes the hit for a lot of money.''
Violating trainers or veterinarians would face license suspensions and fines growing in severity for repeat infractions in a year's time.
Notably missing from the new version was an outclause that would have the commission review the impact of the raceday ban during the phasein period,[url=http://www.xantrex.cc]cheap louis vuitton[/url]. The initial proposal called for a commission review of the ban in 2013.
fora.pl
- załóż własne forum dyskusyjne za darmo
Powered by
phpBB
© 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
Regulamin