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Texas Dog Track Closes - Financial Woes

Good news: Today (December 31, 2007) is the last time greyhounds will have to run for their lives around the dog track in Corpus Christi. Hopefully, that saves the lives of a few thousand greyhounds who won’t be overbred just to make a buck.

According to the article, the Corpus Christi dog track was facing financial losses of $3.5 million a year. That oughta send a message to the powers the be that the cruel blood sport of greyhound racing is no longer entertaining to the masses.

The article says that the track still has 70 dogs that need homes and will feed them until adoptions are made. We hope that is truly the case. We hope the dogs don’t disappear like dogs do in Tucson.

Imagine a track closing because of financial woes. It appears that Texas is far superior than Arizona where the greyhound racing tracks not only get away with murder but also not paying any state taxes.

AZ Horse and Greyhound Racing Tax Breaks Could Hurt Bets

We ran across this article that appeared in the AZ Daily Star in June 2007.

The article says that since the horse and greyhound racing get such heavy tax breaks, the Department of AZ Racing is not funded enough to do their job and protect the people who bet on the horses and greyhounds.  (Pssst: You’re not funded enough to protect the greyhounds either.)

Is the state’s priorities screwed or what?

Arizona is facing a huge budget crisis and the Department of Racing is worried about how people who gamble on the horses and dogs can be hurt.

We guess what galls us the most is that horse racing and greyhound racing even gets tax breaks.

Mr. and Ms. Business Owner — do you get a hardship tax break?

The article further goes on to say, “Overall, Gonsher said, the tax credits and exemptions during the last six years have totaled $44 million.

 The result is that only one of four Arizona horse and dog tracks — Turf Paradise — has paid any racing taxes for several years.”

What could Arizona do with $44 million?  That’s only in the past six years.

Horse racing and greyhound racing has not paid taxes since 1995. That’s 12 years and counting…

16 Missing Greyhounds at Tucson Dog Racing Track

The article has generated some really interesting comments. Please continue to read the article and never forgive or forget about the hell hole known as the Tucson Greyhound Park.

Take action - Please write letters to the Governor Janet Napolitano and the other politicans. Writing to Geoffrey Gonsher,  Director of Arizona Racing, seems to be a waste of time and energy. Instead write to Janet Napolitano and your elected officials. Make your anger count.

Thank you

Failing Greyhound Race Track Wants to Lobby for Slots

December 31 will be the last day to make a bet at the Corpus Christi greyhound race track.

Once it closes, the owners of this track are going to spend $1 million lobbying legislature to reopen the track and put slot machines in it.

We wonder how the greyhounds were treated at the track and how much money the Corpus Christi track is spending to find homes for hounds that are no longer racing? Is the Corpus Christi track hauling these hounds to safe and appropriate venues? Is the Corpus Christi greyhound track donating large sums of money to the local greyhound adoption groups to pay for food, shelter, and medical expenses for these hounds while they await appropriate adoptive homes?

According to the article, greyhound racing was once thought to be a revenue stream for the state. Maybe 20 years ago but that was before online gambling, indian gaming casinos, and all the negative press associated with greyhound racing cruelty.

Today, racing is lagging. Attendance is down. Wagering is down. Purses are down. Breeding is down. Taxes paid to state coffers are down.

Unlike Arizona, which supports the racing industry and doesn’t receive any money in state taxes — Texas does not, which is why the greyhound racing industry cannot afford to stay afloat.

Cockfighting, Dogfighting, Greyhound Racing-Blood Sports

Cockfighting, dog fighting, and greyhound racing are blood sports propagated to fulfill people’s sick sense of entertainment. All involve animals without rights that are used as money makers and when they are no longer profitable, gamecocks are tortured or put to death by inhumane methods.

Cockfighting is illegal in Washington, D.C., plus 49 states and in August 2008, cockfighting will be illegal in Louisiana. Unfortunately, illegal or not, cockfighting still exists and people are still getting busted for it even in Pima County. Drugged gamecocks fight to their death while pierced with razor blades and are tortured along the way by having their eyes plucked out. What kind of entertainment is this? Is it cultural? No! Cockfighting is a felony in 35 states including Arizona. Being a spectator at a cockfighting event is illegal in 41 states including Arizona.

 

Dog fighting is yet another blood sport which recently made headlines along with Michael Vick. Comedienne Whoopi Goldberg defended Vick by saying that dog fighting was a cultural thing with young black men in the ‘hood. Yet, according to a recent survey, public opinion polls show opposition to dog fighting across the board regardless of culture.

 

Dog fighting pits dog against dog until the bloody end. Dogs are electrocuted and tortured. What about this is entertainment? Dog fighting is outlawed in all 50 states and a felony in all but two — Idaho and Wyoming.

 

For greyhound racing, dogs do not fight each other yet they are virtually running for their lives. Greyhound racing is still legal in 14 states. Unfortunately, Arizona is one of them. Crimes against greyhounds have been perpetrated by man as racing greyhounds in Arizona have been buried in mass graves with their ears cut off to hide their tattoo numbers. Greyhounds routinely disappear and fall through the cracks without ever being accounted for. They are frequently covered in ticks and sit in their own urine and feces for days. Some swallow stones and their own collars resulting in seizures and death.

 

Greyhound deaths are only counted when a track veterinarian euthanizes them. When they are taken to local veterinarians to be euthanized, get on a truck and transported by the hundreds to unknown deaths, or dumped in the desert – they go unaccounted for.

 

Dogs run and they break their legs, hocks, and backs. They are euthanized even when they finish the race and there is an adoption rep on her way to pick them up! Or they sit in their cages for days or weeks unattended to, with broken limbs and broken hearts.

 

The state of Arizona doesn’t have enough money in their budget to properly drug test dogs; the industry standard is nine but AZ Department of Racing tests two or three. Greyhound race dogs have no rights as they are deemed as property by the people who own them. If the owners want their property destroyed – they’re destroyed. No questions asked. 

 Don’t tell us that greyhound racing is not a blood sport.   Yet the AZ Department of Racing has on their website – that they encourage and promote the breeding of horses and greyhounds.  Why?

Arizona Greyhound Racing Not Paid State Taxes Since 1995

Show me the money! Arizona has a huge budget deficit. Maybe because we’re a border state but maybe because the AZ greyhound racing industry and horse racing industry has not paid state pari-mutuel taxes since 1995. Damn! We are tax payers, why not these businesses? Greyhound racing is not a non-profit organization nor is it a church.

Help! Do our politicians have their heads in the sand?

Arizona is facing a huge budget crunch and you can read the audit report here as to why and how the Arizona greyhound racing industry gets away with not paying state pari-mutuel taxes.

If you pay taxes in Arizona, you should be raging mad right about now! Time to protest by sending letters to the Honorable Janet Napolitano and your relected officials.

Florida Greyhound Race Track’s Prognosis Not So Good

We were considering posting this in the “good news” category but while it’s promising, we need immediate gratification.

It is heartening to hear that Florida, a state with too many greyhound race tracks, thinks that the greyhound race track in Bonita Springs is waning in popular as only old folks go there and these oldies are dying off.

Click here to read the Ft. Myers News-Press article.

AZ Dept of Racing Promotes Greyhound Breeding

According to the Arizona Department of Racing’s home page – the Department of Racing promotes and encourages the breeding of horses and greyhounds in the State.

Scroll down to “Department Description” and read that shocking paragraph.

There are at least 600 greyhounds that file through Tucson Dog Track every year – many never get to legitimate adoption groups. Many end up as coyote hunters which translates into death. Hundreds are hauled to god knows where and are presumed dead by the Arizona Department of Racing, the government organization that encourages their breeding. Some are euthanized for broken hocks and legs. And some are taken to local veterinarians to be euthanized; they are never accounted for.  Some are given away unaltered to friends of handlers or free to track attendees and their fate is unknown yet they breed with other dogs, further increasing the unwanted pet population of Pima County, and that’s why there are so many greyhound mixes who usually end up at Pima Animal Control.

Common sense dictates that with the ongoing abuse and cruelty affecting greyhounds – the state of Arizona’s Racing Department would not “promote and encourage the breeding of greyhounds.” 

Looking at the “Department Description”, a few other fallacies come to mind:

The Department oversees and supervises…greyhound… - We beg to differ. There is next to none supervision at Tucson Dog Track; if there was then perhaps bad things wouldn’t happen to greyhounds at the Tucson track and/or leaving the track suspiciously to parts unknown.

The Department…enforces laws and rules related to racing and wagering to protect industry participants and the public. The Department’s veterinarians and track stewards did nothing to protect a dog (on the night of August 31, 2007) who broke her hock but finished the race. Tucson Dog Track failed to follow the statute regulation that “every effort must be made to adopt out a dog.” An adoption rep was on her way to pick up the dog.

No, the Arizona Department of Racing failed to protect the industry’s participants – its dogs.

And whether or not the Arizona Department of Racing is going to penalize the perpetrators who failed to adopt out the dog rather than kill her – is yet to be seen.

Nevertheless — let the greyhound breeding continue…

Greyhound Abuse History - Arizona

In case you forget why greyhound racing has to end, let us count the ways.

This despicable list is just for Arizona during the 1980s and 1990s.

It still continues…

Contacts: Silence Kills

Geoffrey Gonsher – Director
Arizona Department of Racing 
1110 W. Washington – Suite 260
Phoenix, AZ 85007
602.364.1700
ggonsher@azracing.gov

Nan Mitchell – Administrative Coordinator for the Racing Commission
Arizona Department of Racing
1110 W. Washington – Suite 260
Phoenix, AZ 85007
602.364.1702
nmitchell@azracing.gov

More Department of Racing contacts

Honorable Janet Napolitano
Governor of Arizona
1700 West Washington
Phoenix, Arizona 85007
Telephone (602) 542-4331
Toll Free 1-(800) 253-0883
Fax (602) 542-1381
http://azgovernor.gov/Contact.asp

Terry Goddard
Attorney General
1275 West Washington Street
Phoenix, AZ 85007
602.542.5025
800.352.8431 (toll free)
Fax 602.542.4085
aginfo@azag.gov

District 29 – AZ House of Representatives – (South Tucson)
Linda Lopez – llopez@azleg.gov – 602.926.4089,  fax-602.417.3029
Tom Prezelski – tprezelski@azleg.gov 602.926.3424, fax-602.417.3129
Arizona House of Representatives
Capitol Complex
1700 West Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85007-2890
Toll Free 1.800.352.8404

District 29 – AZ Senate – (South Tucson)
Victor Soltero – vsoltero@azleg.gov   602.926.5342  fax 602.417.3169
Arizona State Senate
Capitol Complex
1700 West Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85007-2890
1-800-352-8404

Locate your AZ House of Representative or AZ Senator
House & Senate info desk – 398-6000 (local to Tucson)

Pima County Supervisor – District 2
Hon. Ramón O. Valadez
Pima County Board of Supervisors
130 West Congress, 11th Floor
Tucson, Arizona 85701
(520) 740-8126
http://www.pima.gov/bos/dist2/index.html

Animal Cruelty Task Force