
Another proposal to ban greyhound racing
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_This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts._ Regular readers of Unleashed are probably familiar with
Riley the greyhound, who is retired from his career as a racer at the Agua Caliente racetrack in Tijuana. He’s now living, well, the life of Riley, and Times Entertainment Editor Betsy
Sharkey has offered periodic updates on how he’s adjusting to life after the track. That’s him checking out the pool. Fans of Riley -- and dogs in general -- might be interested in this news
from Massachusetts, where voters will decide whether to ban greyhound racing. The Associated Press reports that seven states have already outlawed the races : Idaho, Maine, North Carolina,
Nevada, Vermont, Virginia and Washington. The AP offers this look at the upcoming election in Massachusetts. > BOSTON — Voters in Massachusetts will soon decide whether > greyhound
racing should continue there, though the real question > might be whether the once-popular sport dies a quick death or a slow > one. Across the country, the legions of blue-collar fans
the > industry relied on have been lured away by casinos, lotteries, > online gambling and other forms of betting. Track owners fighting > the proposed ban fiercely oppose claims
that the dogs are > mistreated. But animal-welfare issues aside, others involved in > greyhound racing glumly concede a cultural shift away from the > sport. ‘It’s certainly
changing,” said Gary Guccione, > executive director of the National Greyhound Association. “It has > downsized in recent years. We’ve seen a decrease in the number of > tracks and
dogs being bred.” In the 1980s there were more than > 50,000 greyhounds bred each year to race at about 60 tracks > nationwide, Guccione said. This year, the number of dogs will drop
> to under 20,000 and the number of tracks has been cut almost in > half. Since the end of 2004 alone, 13 U.S. tracks have closed or > ended live dog racing, according to the
Committee to Protect Dogs, > which is leading the campaign for the Massachusetts ban. > It has raised nearly $400,000 since January 2007, nearly 10 times as > much as opponents of
the ban have raised. Racing fans still come to > sit at tables in front of television monitors at Wonderland > Greyhound Park in Revere, one of the state’s two dog tracks. Live >
racing won’t resume until the spring, but they can still wager on > races elsewhere via simulcast. > It’s a far cry from the 22,607 fans who filled Wonderland on May > 16, 1945,
when the track set its single performance attendance > record — or the day in June 1939 when 1,500 people packed a dinner > at Boston’s Copley Plaza to honor Rural Rube, who had just
won 19 > races in a single season. If the ban passes, Massachusetts will join > seven states that already ban live greyhound racing: Idaho, Maine, > North Carolina, Nevada, Vermont,
Virginia and Washington, according > to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Gary Temple, > general manager of Raynham Greyhound Park in Raynham, is leading the >
opposition to the ballot question. He calls backers “zealots” > who are misleading the public about track conditions and the > treatment of dogs. > Temple said handlers and owners
have invested time and money in the > dogs and the tracks are some of the most highly regulated industries > in the state. “I am animal lover myself and I would never allow an >
animal to be mistreated here,” he said. “There’s a lot of > passion and love that these trainers give their dogs. They are > family members.” Of all the claims made by the tracks, the
most > contentious is the statement — repeated by Temple — that they > have achieved a 100 percent adoption rate for their dogs once their > racing days are over. Backers of the
question say it’s untrue. > They point to statistics reported by the tracks to the state racing > commission that show just 31 percent of dogs were adopted in 2007, > while 55
percent went on to race at other tracks. The remaining dogs > went back to their owners, to breeding farms and a handful — less > than 1 percent — were euthanized. Activists say
there’s no way > to monitor what happens to the dogs sent to tracks in other states > — and even Temple concedes that “after they go to another track > it’s up to that track.”
Christine Dorchak, one of the organizers > of the question, said dog racing is particularly cruel for > greyhounds. “These dogs are very gentle and very fragile,” she > said. “When
eight of them are put in a pack and trained to run > after the same object they can be injured very easily. It’s > basically putting these dogs on a collision course.” > Dorchak’s
group has documented what they said are hundreds of > cases of dogs being injured at Massachusetts tracks since 2002, when > the state first required tracks to report injuries. The
injuries > range from scrapes and cuts to broken bones. Dorchak said the new > statistics have strengthened the case for closing the tracks since > 2000, when a similar ballot
question lost narrowly. Closing the > tracks could mean the loss of about 1,000 jobs associated with dog > racing, according to Temple. Dorchak called any loss regrettable, > but
added, “Our economy should not be built on cruelty to dogs.” For more information on the ‘Net: Raynham Greyhound Park The Committee to Protect Dogs -- Steve Padilla _Top photo: Betsy
Sharkey_