Kentucky Drug Panel Okays Model Rule for Most Breeds

The Kentucky Equine Drug Research Council (KEDRC), on a 4-2 vote Dec. 3, recommended the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) adopt the national uniform medication rules for Thoroughbred racing.
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The Kentucky Equine Drug Research Council (KEDRC), on a 4-2 vote Dec. 3, recommended the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) adopt the national uniform medication rules for Thoroughbred racing.

The vote included the rules for Quarter Horse, Arabian, and Appaloosa racing. The KEDRC opted to table action on the Standardbred medication rule given one of two members that represent the breed on the council was absent, and there are concerns over a few of the suggested changes.

The KHRC is scheduled to meet Dec. 11, at which time it could act on the KEDRC recommendation. The commission also has the right to approve the proposed Standarbred document if it believes the rules should be uniform for all racing breeds.

KEDRC members Sen. Damon Thayer; Rogers Beasley; Gary Lavin, DVM; and Jerry Yon, MD, voted to support the model rules. Trainer Rick Hiles and Andy Roberts, DVM, voted against the changes; they suggested there isn't enough scientific evidence to support changing the cut-off for administration of the bronchodilator clenbuterol from three days before a race to 14 days as recommended by the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC)

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Tom LaMarra, a native of New Jersey and graduate of Rutgers University, has been news editor at The Blood-Horse since 1998. After graduation he worked at newspapers in New Jersey and Pennsylvania as an editor and reporter with a focus on municipal government and politics. He also worked at Daily Racing Form and Thoroughbred Times before joining The Blood-Horse. LaMarra, who has lived in Lexington since 1994, has won various writing awards and was recognized with the Old Hilltop Award for outstanding coverage of the horse racing industry. He likes to spend some of his spare time handicapping races.

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