Posts Tagged ‘kentucky special session’

IF KY SLOTS BILL PASSES HOUSE: WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW

Friday, June 19th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
UPDATE: Frankfort insiders say that the A & R Senate Committee will not meet until Monday and Senate President Williams will allow the bill to be heard. Interested parties will have the weekend and Monday morning to contact their Senators.

If the bill to approve video lottery terminals for Kentucky racetracks passes the state’s House of Representatives during the special session on Friday, the next battleground will likely be the Senate’s Appropriations and Revenue Committee later in the day. That’s the most likely scenario for the bill, the Paulick Report has learned from sources. Republican Senate president David Williams, an opponent of the bill, is expected to send it to the A & R Committee with the likelihood that it will be killed under the chairmanship of northeast Kentucky Republican Charlie Borders.

Interested parties are encouraged to personally attend the Senate committee meeting.

If you are unable to attend and want your opinion to be heard on the issue, call members of the committee to tell them where you stand. Click here for a list of members of the Senate A & R Committee. Once on the page, click on the names of the individual members to get contact information.

Here is the list of A & R Committee members in the Senate with their Capitol Annex phone numbers/extensions:

Charlie Borders (R):  (502) 564-8100 Ext. 676

Sen. Bob Leeper (I) (vice chair):(502) 564-8100 Ext. 712
Sen. David E. Boswell (D): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 662
Sen. Tom Buford (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 610
Sen. Denise Harper Angel (D): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 633
Sen. Ernie Harris (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 605
Sen. Dan Kelly (R): (502) 564-2450
Sen. Alice Forgy Kerr (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 625
Sen. Vernie McGaha (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 656
Sen. R.J. Palmer (D): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 714
Sen. Joey Pendleton (D):  (502) 564-8100 Ext. 622
Sen. Tim Shaughnessy (D): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 621
Sen. Brandon Smith (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 661
Sen. Robert Stivers (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 623
Sen. Gary Tapp (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 648
Sen. Elizabeth Tori (R): (502) 564-8100 Ext. 645
Sen. Jack Westwood (R):  (502) 564-8100 Ext. 615
 
 

KENTUCKY WITHOUT HORSES?

Sunday, June 14th, 2009
On the eve of the Kentucky General Assembly’s special session, the Paulick Report received the following article, one that takes a look into the future of a Bluegrass State without a horse industry, something many thought was the birthright of a generation.  It was written by Murray D. West, a family physician based in Kentucky’s Bourbon County who has a lifetime involvement with Thoroughbreds. West came to Kentucky from British Columbia, Canada, in 1981 after working at tracks in Vancouver. He has been involved as an owner, breeder (he bred Grade 1 winner Freedom Cry) and, briefly, as trainer. West has written two books on racing, "Dreams of Roses" and "The Challenge Cup." 

West’s story is fictional, but anyone who understands the current trends of the Kentucky horse industry knows it might not be that far from the truth. — Ray Paulick

                                                                              *     *     *

By Murray D. West
“What used to be here, grandpa?” the young man quietly asked the old fellow. “Why is this stone fence here? It seems to have no apparent purpose, just meandering from here to there, disappearing for a distance, only to reappear further on down the way. It’s a beautiful old fence but it seems out of place here. Mighty strange.”

The old man looked wistfully along the limestone barricade, his tired eyes coming to rest upon two stone pillars, once a welcoming portal of entry to a grand vista, now leading nowhere, serving only to remind of a another time. Now beyond this fence, as far as the eye could see, lay the monotony of rooftops row upon row, masses of houses without distinction, without character.

“Once, years ago…an age ago…this used to be a grand farm, son. All this land, so much land it would take two hours of hard drivin’ to drive from one side to the other…all farm land. And glorious farms they were, mind you, with manicured pastures stretchin’ to the horizon, with mile after mile of black rail fencin’ followin’ the rollin’ contour of pristine land, disappearin’ over the hill just like a railway track winds ‘round a bend, reappearin’ on the next rise. And horses, magnificent Thoroughbreds, sometimes twenty, thirty or more in a field, buckin’ and kickin’, frolickin’ and racin’ just for the sheer joy of being alive in such a place. Oh my, the majesty of those times. It was so very special, son…so very special.”

“If it was so special, gramps, why didn’t it survive? Why isn’t it still here today? Seems to me that something that wonderful shouldn’t disappear. Seems to me like it should stay forever. Least, that’s how I see it.”

Grandpa placed his hand on the young man’s shoulder. “I surely can’t disagree with you about that, my young man. You’d think anythin’ so fine would be cherished and protected like a national treasure. Come to think of it, that’s pretty much what the Bluegrass country was at one time. Mile upon mile of beautiful, productive horse farms, tens of thousands of acres of nutrient-laden soil, enriched by water rising from the deep limestone springs that flourish beneath this land. Thoroughbred nursery’s in numbers too great to count, stretchin’ from Paris in Bourbon County to Versailles and Midway in Woodford County, from Georgetown in Scott County to the hills of Clark and Jessamine, all this Bluegrass land surroundin’ the pulsatin’ heart of it all in Fayette County. There was a time that men and women, horse people, came from ‘round the world just to be a small part of this wondrous place, many returnin’ year after year as if on an annual trek to some sacred shrine or holy land. I know that to be true. I know it ‘cause before I decided to make my home here I was one of those who made that very pilgrimage.”

They walked slowly along the ancient stone wall, sometimes up close and touching then at times admiring from a distance, even the years of neglect not enough to hide the skill of those masons who had created this masterpiece of craftsmanship. The old man stopped to rest and leaned a fatigued old body against the tired and even older bulwark. “Why in that time the horse sales at Keeneland and Fasig-Tipton would go on for days, even weeks, as the finest Thoroughbred horseflesh in the world went to auction. Upon this stage would proudly stand the most desirable bloodlines to be found on this earth, prancin’ and rearin’ and twirlin’ in anxious circles as the auctioneer would sing his spellbindin’ song, with million dollar horses at one time so commonplace as to be almost an afterthought. Everybody was here, from oil rich Middle East sheikhs arrivin’ in their jumbo jets, to small-time cowboys from out West travelin’ half-way ‘cross the country with their two-horse trailers. There was a niche in the market for everybody and they all came, everybody trying their darndest to catch the big horse, to find the next Derby or Oaks winner. Yes sir, this was where it all happened for many, many years…for a century and more. Those were wonderful times, excitin’ times just to be a tiny part of, but…but all gone now…all gone…”

The young man stood beside his grandfather as they looked across the stone wall, turned to him and laid his hand across his weathered back. “Are you okay, gramps? You seem pretty, well…upset. Is everything okay?”

The old gent looked down and moved away from his grandson, again starting to slowly walk along the wall. “I’m okay son. I just feel kind of poorly whenever I think about all this. I feel so sad about what we lost…so angry that the people couldn’t understand what they had…how very unique and grand it all was. And I feel so damned guilty that it was my generation that let it happen, that it happened in my time, and that I wasn’t able to do anythin’ to stop it.” He closed his eyes and his aged mind transported him back to that era. “We had a wonderland, this Bluegrass of Central Kentucky, a piece of heaven that was the envy of the horse world. You could ask anybody from anywhere…and I mean anywhere…about Kentucky, what it was most identified with, and one word came to mind, one word that exemplified what Kentucky stood for…horses! Beautiful Thoroughbred horses…the very best!

“Oh, the local citizens acted so proud of it all when their guests would come to visit. They would drive their visitors around the countryside, proudly showin’ them all the magnificent farms, takin’ them on tours to see and have their photos taken with the very finest stallions, magnificent beasts often housed in palatial barns that by comparison put most homes to shame, and all the while these folks would carry on, braggin’ about this being the horse capital of the world! Heck, most folks at that time acted like all these farms were their birthright, that they existed for their pleasure and convenience. At moments like that they all seemed to be so proud of it, seemed to understand what they had, how fortunate they were,” he said softly, then paused for a moment, “but they didn’t understand…not at all. They took it all for granted, is what they did. Figured it had always been here and always would. They wouldn’t listen when the economy got real tough and the horse industry was especially hard hit and the horse people started to have big problems. Wouldn’t listen as these horse folks cried out for assistance, as they tried to explain how it was becomin’ so bad that the very future of the horse industry in Kentucky was threatened. These same horsemen tried to tell of some concessions, some urgent legislation, required for Kentucky to remain on top, assistance required to keep them on a level playin’ field with other states.

“Here again, though, the average citizen had this misconception about horse people…figured they were all rich, didn’t believe their call for assistance, figured that they could fend for themselves. They reasoned these farms had always been here and couldn’t conceive that they might ever be gone.” He turned to look at his grandson. “Now those same folks forgot that about 150,000 people made their livelihood from these farms and from the horses that were bred and raised on this land. They forgot that runnin’ these farms, lookin’ after these horses while keepin’ it all looking like a national park, costs a heap of money…a whole heap of money. How can you forgive folks takin’ such a gift for granted, takin’ it so much for granted that it becomes neglected, that it’s allowed to slip away…forever? Beyond me, son…beyond me.”

“Gramps, I’m still very confused. If it was all so beautiful as you say…and if all the people cared for it so much…what happened? Why was it allowed to disappear? That doesn’t make sense to me at all. If I had something so special, something so wonderful as you say, I’d sure be doing everything I could to look after it, to preserve it and protect it.”

“The horse people tried, son. They tried, but they couldn’t make the average citizen realize how dire things were…until it was just too late. You see, there was a time, many, many years ago…really just before and around the time I was born…when horse racing was king! Used to be tens of thousands of folks attended the races every day. Hell fire, on weekends it was nothing to have fifty thousand show up for a major race at any one of numerous tracks around the country. Things began to change, though, when television came along and with time racing became less popular with the general population. There became more and more competition for horse racing, more opportunities for people to spend their entertainment dollar and, if you believe the historians, racing failed to recognize the threat and did a poor job of promotin’ itself to the public. As a result there became fewer arenas of racing that were strong until finally, in the midst of a declinin’ number of strugglin’ race tracks all around the country, there were only a few pockets where racin’ really thrived. For a while none could compare with our racing in Kentucky…not New York, not California…nowhere. Churchill had the Oaks and the Derby, and Keeneland was…well, Keeneland was simply heaven on earth for those who cherished the horse.

“Around the turn of this century things got really bad. The economy in general took a real nasty turn, a terrible recession, and this coincided with a time when the horse industry was facin’ even more problems, especially with the emergence of major competition from casino gamblin’…from slot machines! The situation was especially bad in Kentucky. Casinos opened up in neighborin’ states, often at racetracks, and soon the people of Kentucky were goin’ to other states to gamble on the slots ‘cause the powers that be in our state couldn’t recognize the wisdom of havin’ slots right here, blind to the needs of the horse industry…blind to the importance of horse racin’ and breedin’ to our state…and ignorant to the revenue such slots would return to the state in the form of taxes. Now that attitude, that oversight, was terrible for the Kentucky horsemen because folks only have so much money to gamble and, if they do it somewhere else, well, they can’t do it here. When the gamblin’ goes down at a racetrack the purses are quick to follow, then goes the quality of racin’ and it sure isn’t too long before the breedin’ follows suit. To add further to this misery, a large part of the money gambled in those other states was gambled in slot machines which were set up on the racetrack facilities. For every dollar wagered on the slots the state government got a big hunk in taxes but the tracks also got a share, a smaller portion for supervisin’ the slots and puttin’ on the show. Well, the government of those states took that money, Kentucky money…money they earned from Kentuckians who were forced to another state to exercise their prerogative to gamble…and used it to improve their schools, improve their roads, improve their social systems, and in general used the money wagered by Kentuckians to assist the people of their state.”

The young man stopped walking and looked to his grandfather. “Seems to me like the citizens of Kentucky could have used that money just as well. Why not have slots at the tracks in our state?”

“A lot of people agreed with your line of thinkin’, my young man. But unfortunately there were very outspoken opponents of slots in this state, opponents with political clout. Beats me why some folks think they can dictate to others what they may or may not do, but there you have it. So, to carry on, what do you think the racetracks in those other states did with all the money they made from those slot machines? Never mind, I’ll tell you. They poured it back into their horse industry and the most important thing they did in that regard was to make that money available for purses, bigger purses for the horse people of their state to race for. Now, let me ask you. Let’s imagine you had a racehorse and you wanted to run him. Let’s suppose the amount of money you could win for your race in Kentucky was $12,000 but just across the border in Indiana you could win $15,000, or a little further away in Pennsylvania you could win $20,000. Now, if you owned such a horse, just where would you race him?”

“No brainer, gramps. I’d run in Pennsylvania if I could. I’d be crazy not to do that!”

“Exactly. And that’s just what happened to the horse industry in Kentucky. All the neighborin’ states with horse racin’ were getting’ these slot machines and the tracks were makin’ a great amount of money from them…now remember of course, not near so much as the taxes earned by the government of each state, but still a bundle of money…and the tracks were steadily increasin’ their purse money for the horses. It wasn’t too long before many of the horsemen from Kentucky started racin’ in these other states…and who could blame them? With the reduction in purse money at Kentucky tracks came smaller fields and poorer horses, the result bein’ that wagerin’ further decreased, and the cycle continued. The tracks made less and less money, the purses got smaller and smaller, until pretty soon nobody wanted to race here in Kentucky. With incentives for breedin’ developin’ in other states soon one, then another, big stallion started movin’ away from the Kentucky stud farms until finally there was an exodus of stallions out of our state to other states rich with lucrative breedin’ programs. With the studs go the mares and it wasn’t long before farms were going out of business, ultimately sold to folks who had no interest at all in racin’…didn’t give a damn about history and horses. Just interested in makin’ the most money they could from this now plentiful, and available, farm land. The beautiful barns were torn down, fencin’ was ripped away, and most of the stone walls destroyed, with just the odd one left for show…like this fine fence before us. Truth be known, for old timers like myself such structures mostly serve now as a painful reminder of a better time. Well, you can see for yourself the end result right here where we stand. The famous bluegrass pastures became overrun, not with beautiful mares and foals as before, but with intolerable housin’ subdivisions. It all happened so quickly, almost silently, that it was over before you knew it. And now it’s just a memory…gone forever.”

“Damn gramps, I just don’t understand! It seems so simple. Why didn’t Kentucky bring slot machines to their racetracks so the citizens of this state could benefit and the horse industry could compete with the surrounding states which had racetrack casinos? Just how blind were they? If they’d done that simple thing it seems to me to we’d have had the best of both worlds. The state would benefit greatly with increased taxes, the citizens would benefit from all the improved programs that tax money would bring, and the horse industry would have continued to thrive, and today we’d still have those grand farms, we’d still be the center of the horse industry…still the horse capital of the world!”

“We tried son. We tried. Somehow, though, the folks in Frankfort always found somethin’ more important to argue about than the problems of the horse people. Somehow the needs of the horse industry were always placed on the back burner, on the list to be discussed at the next session…or the next…well, you get the idea. Finally it was too late. We were too far behind, the industry had moved away, the farm land was sold off…and it was forever over as we once knew it. What a bloody tragedy. Nothing short of a terrible, bloody, avoidable tragedy!”

“Gramps. I never realized this before but I was cheated, robbed of a vital part of my heritage, by the ignorance of the people of this state! How could the people have allowed that to happen? I don’t understand how they could be so damned blind!”

“Neither do I son…neither do I!”

                                                                              *     *     *

The Kentucky Equine Education Project has called for Kentucky’s horse industry to rally in support of legislation in the Capitol Rotunda in Frankfort, Ky., on Wednesday, June 17, at 10 a.m. Individuals in the horse industry are urged to attend, but to call in advance and schedule meetings with their state Senators and Representatives. Click
here to determine who represents your interests in Frankfort.

 

BESHEAR READY TO FIGHT TO ‘SAVE THE HORSE INDUSTRY’

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

By Ray Paulick
Perhaps I was wrong about Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear when I wrote on Sunday that I didn’t think he would be able to demonstrate the kind of leadership necessary to help push through legislation allowing Kentucky racetracks to install slot machines and better compete with tracks in other states.

This afternoon, Beshear issued what for him was a tough and pointed statement on the subject. In so doing, he added a proposal for slots (technically they will be called Video Lottery Terminals and be run by the Kentucky Lottery Corporation) to the agenda for the special session of the legislature, to deal with the state’s budget crisis. The Democratic governor called for the session to begin June 15.

The Kentucky Equine Education Project applauded Beshear’s initiative, issuing the following statement: "We are extremely excited that the governor has chosen to include VLTs at racetracks on the special session agenda. His leadership on this initiative should be applauded by everyone involved in the signature industry of the state. We’re confident that he and most members of the House and Senate will shepherd this legislation through successful passage. It is critically important to level the competitive playing  field with others states. This is exactly what is needed and at the exact time it is needed."

Click here to view Beshear’s official proclamation on the horse industry and the need for VLTs to assist it.

Following is the full press release issued by Beshear’s office:
 
Beshear: Gaming necessary to help save horse industry
VLTs would be limited to tracks, provide needed revenue

FRANKFORT, Ky. (June 4, 2009) – Saying Kentucky’s horse industry is threatened with extinction, Gov. Steve Beshear today added a proposal to this month’s special legislative session to allow expanded gaming at the state’s racetracks to increase purses and breeder incentives.

“Kentucky’s horse industry – a living, breathing part of our cultural heritage and one of our strongest, most precious  commodities abroad – is in a state of crisis,” Gov. Beshear told reporters today in announcing his proposal. “Some even say it’s dying.”

Gov. Beshear said the proposal – which would limit Video Lottery Terminals (VLTs) to approved racetracks – would level the playing field for Kentucky’s horse industry, which has faced increasing competition from states that have increased race purses and breeder incentives from expanded gaming proceeds.

The result, he said, is that Kentucky is losing race dates at Churchill Downs; other tracks are facing closure and owners, breeders and jockeys are going elsewhere to board and race horses. About 100,000 jobs are connected with the horse industry in Kentucky, which translates into a $4 billion economic impact.

“Kentucky is, and remains, the horse capital of the world,” Gov. Beshear said. “But if we do not act, if we refuse to stand up for our signature industry, that title could be changed to Former Horse Capital of the World.

“As Governor, I cannot – and I will not – stand idly by and let that happen. Not without a fight. This proposal would allow thousands of working-class Kentuckians to continue to provide their families with a roof over their heads, food on their tables and the ability to send their kids to school.”

The Governor said his administration is continuing to work on draft legislation, which he hopes will be finalized in the coming days. He said it would contain details of how VLTs, which would be run through the Kentucky Lottery Corporation, would be taxed and generate revenue for both the state and industry.

Gov. Beshear said that while expanded gaming at the tracks would not impact the upcoming year’s budget, it would create recurring net revenues, which could help close the gap created when federal stimulus dollars are no longer available in two years. Such revenues would, undoubtedly, help with funding for schools, health care and public safety. Moreover, Gov. Beshear said, he believes the legislature can move forward with this proposal without a Constitutional amendment.

“The legislature, in our judgment, has the authority,” he said. “Now, we must determine if we have the will.”

Finally, Gov. Beshear said, that while he is willing to consider other ideas for helping one of Kentucky’s signature industries, it is time to make a decision on gaming, which has been the subject of intense debate for many years.

“Time is of the essence, and right now, this idea is the only one on the table,” he said. “It’s time to vote on it – up or down, with full knowledge of what is at stake and what is at risk … Political machinations and calculations are, frankly, not a part of my reasoning today. The unknown cannot be an excuse for timidity or inaction.

“Today, I am calling on legislators and the people of Kentucky to come forward and save the horse industry … before it is too late.”
                                                                                                ###

AS LEADERS GO, BESHEAR IS A NON-STARTER

Sunday, May 31st, 2009
By Ray Paulick
So Kentucky’s governor, Democrat Steve Beshear, has called a special session of the state’s legislature, beginning June 15, to deal with what he said was a budget crisis. The news landed with a rather indifferent thud in many regions of Kentucky, in part because David Williams, the Republican Senate president, said Beshear’s reasons for the session weren’t valid.

Beshear  was elected in 2007 largely on the platform of expanding gambling to ease Kentucky’s budget shortfalls and to help the struggling horse industry. Since then, he seems to have spent a majority of his time hiding in an undisclosed location, peering out occasionally to issue proclamations and reassure Kentucky residents that he is still alive and well. He looks to be no match for Williams, who has managed to bully many members of his own party to the point that they cower in a corner of indecision on important issues until hearing from their anointed leader. If Williams says nothing is going to happen in a special session, it’s a pretty safe bet nothing is going to happen—unless someone has the courage to take him on.

The third leg of Kentucky’s political stool is Democratic House leader Greg Stumbo, who has been the point person for carrying out Beshear’s election promise to help Kentucky’s horse industry compete with neighboring states Indiana, West Virginia and Illininois, by proposing legislation permitting slot machines at racetracks. Stumbo hopes the slots issue will be addressed during the special session but painted a bleak picture for the prospects of that happening with these words: “The governor’s leadership is critical.”

Asking Steve Beshear to show leadership at this stage of his governorship is a bit like asking Calvin Borel to send Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird to the early lead in a six-furlong race. I guess anything is possible, but I don’t think it’s going to happen. Sure, he talked a good game when he spoke at the Kentucky Derby Trainers’ Dinner in Louisville during Derby week, saying he didn’t want to be the governor who was presiding over the death of the Thoroughbred industry, but that was like throwing red meat into a pack of starving lions.

The Kentucky Equine Education Project (KEEP) has been quietly laying the groundwork for this special session, sending out hundreds of thousands of brochures to Kentuckians about the fast-declining state of the horse industry and placing radio ads and newspaper op-ed pieces around the state. But KEEP can’t do it on their own. They need help in the state capital of Frankfort.

Meanwhile, other states are having Kentucky’s racing industry for lunch. West Virginia, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Louisiana and other slots-enriched racing programs are attracting horses from the Bluegrass State because higher purses are being offered. Breeding stock is beginning to leave Kentucky, too. The Illinois Senate approved a racetrack slots bill (it’s unclear whether the House will OK the measure), but that state already has riverboat casinos where Kentuckians are spending their gambling dollars.

It’s time Beshear man-up and take on David Williams in this issue that is critical to the horse industry and Kentucky. The governor should ask Williams about his trips to gambling boats in Indiana, and whether or not the Senate president is ever “comped” on those trips or given special treatment by the casino companies who will fight tooth and nail to keep slot machines away from Kentucky tracks. He should ask if Williams has something against the horse business, the signature industry in Kentucky.

I doubt we’ll see that happen, if recent events are any indication. After Eclipse Award-winning writer Billy Reed’s blog post on his web site about Williams’ opposition to the horse industry (Williams is enemy no. 1 to racing in Kentucky) was distributed by a staffer for the Kentucky Horse Racing Racing Commission to all of its members, the Paulick Report learned that Beshear apologized to Williams and castigated the commission staffer for daring to send out anything that was critical of the Senate president.

If that’s the kind of leadership we can expect in the upcoming special session, we can kiss any slots legislation goodbye, Kentucky’s signature industry will continue its downward spiral, and the state’s budget crisis will go unresolved.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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