Horse racing-National doping rules delayed amid legal uncertainty

Reuters

Published Dec 12, 2022 07:54PM ET

Updated Dec 12, 2022 08:05PM ET

By Rory Carroll

(Reuters) - U.S. federal officials hit the brakes on Monday regarding the Jan. 1 adoption of national anti-doping rules for racehorses after a recent court ruling against the program.

The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) has spent seven months writing the standards, known as the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program, set to replace a patchwork of state rules to better protect horses.

But a federal appeals court last month ruled unconstitutional the law that creates HISA as it did not give the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enough oversight of the authority's decisions.

In response, the FTC voted on Monday to deny the draft rules "without prejudice due to current legal uncertainties," Ben Mosier, executive director of the authority's horseracing integrity and welfare unit, said in a statement.

Reuters reported this month that U.S. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of horse-racing stronghold Kentucky was pushing for changes to the law that would satisfy the court to be included into a broader spending bill.

The full-year spending bill, known as an "omnibus," could pass before year's end.

In response to the report, attorneys general in nine states urged McConnell in a letter to abandon that work, saying the law takes too much power away from states and imposes unreasonable costs.

Reform proponents say the current position is unsustainable and the public will no longer support an industry in which horses routinely perish during training and competition.