by Lisa Stahl, for ARCI
Charleston, SC — Ed Martin, president of the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI), closed out the racing regulators’ equine welfare and integrity conference Thursday (April 20) by urging his member organizations to extend an invitation to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) to bid on their equine drug testing contracts.
USADA is the national anti-doping organization in the United States for Olympic, Paralympic and Pan-American sport. Some prominent people in horse racing believe USADA has a contribution to make in regards to drug testing.
“If USADA wants to get involved in racing, there’s nothing stopping them,” Martin told the ARCI membership meeting. “They could do that today, by responding to a procurement from a racing commission to do their drug testing. I don’t believe USADA has bid on any drug-testing contract from any commission. I do know, when I read about them doing boxing or mixed martial arts, that they apparently have done work for other state agencies that regulate” professional sports.
“So, it might be good if every commission, the next time you do a procurement for lab services, include USADA on the bid list. Let them make a proposal. Then it would be really interesting, if you had a commission that had USADA be their lab, to see the difference with the labs we now have. If you look at the USADA testing results, the percentages that are clear and the percentages that have an adverse analytical finding, it’s comparable to all the world anti-doping labs and it’s comparable to the labs doing the testing in professional horse racing.
“Nobody is against talented people who maybe can help us do better. Rather than have a 20-year debate over how to re-structure the world of racing regulation … if somebody thinks USADA ought to be involved in horse racing, then let’s give them that opportunity. Let’s give them the opportunity to compete for a state’s drug-testing contract, and let’s see how they do. If they do better, I’m sure everybody in the room is going to want them.”
Martin concluded by telling the regulators, “This association’s strength is based on the efforts of everybody in this room and your colleagues who are not. Collectively we take a tremendous amount of heat, and usually take heat from people who have absolutely no idea of some of the challenges and obstacles that stand in your way running a government agency to try to police a sport with tremendous moving parts.
“We’ve made a lot of important progress — individually and collectively. There’s more work to be done — just as there will always be more work to be done.”
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