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“I
want to stay here,’’ said horse trainer Bernell Rhone, who has been racing at
Canterbury since the track opened in 1985. “I can hang in there a while longer.
The Sampsons are fighting as hard as they can. They’ve gone above and beyond.
It’s just sad that the government is playing political football with our jobs.”
Photo: Sennott, Richard, Star Tribune
Horsemen want to stay
Spokane - MN - July 5, 2011 - At Canterbury Park, July 4th always
features large and lively crowds, free hot dogs and the ever-popular
dachshund race, which puts sprightly little wiener dogs on a track
usually reserved for horses. The only thing that survived this year
was the frankfurters, part of a free lunch the track provided for
people who work in the stable area.
They were the only people at Canterbury on Monday. The sun beat down
on empty asphalt that should have been overflowing with cars, vacant
picnic tables that usually would be crowded with horseplayers, and a
lonely, silent paddock. While legislators and Gov. Mark Dayton took
a break -- further delaying an end to the government shutdown that
forced Canterbury to close -- track President Randy Sampson figured
that canceling four days of holiday weekend racing had cost his
company $1.3 million in revenue.
People in horse racing traditionally care for one another in hard
times. In addition to Monday's free pizza, hot dogs and ice cream,
Sampson distributed coupons for free food in the track kitchen for
workers whose income has been reduced by the shutdown. Canterbury's
horsemen, in turn, applauded him at a meeting in the track chapel,
and many said they would weather at least one more week without
racing before considering a move to another track.
It is unfathomable that the government's inability to reach
agreement on a budget has endangered one large private business and
several small ones. It is worse that so many of our elected
officials are so selfish, so blinded by party dogma, that they
remain unmoved by the hardship and anxiety they have created.
They have failed all of us. If Canterbury survives this debacle --
which will become more challenging with every racing day lost -- it
will be because its officials, horsemen and employees did not fail
each other. If the government demonstrated a fraction of their
cooperative spirit, faith and respect for one another, the situation
might never have come to this.
"I want to stay here,'' said trainer Bernell Rhone, who has been
racing at Canterbury since the track opened in 1985. "I can hang in
there a while longer. The Sampsons are fighting as hard as they can.
They've gone above and beyond. It's just sad that the government is
playing political football with our jobs."
It's also impossible to understand. Canterbury Park was forced to
close its entire operation, including the card club and wagering on
races from other states, because the law requires its activities to
be regulated by the Minnesota Racing Commission. The racing
commission is a state agency. But all of its funding comes from
Canterbury and its horsemen; not one penny of public money is used.
Canterbury has paid for those regulatory services through July, and
the horsemen have paid their license fees for the season. With the
government shut down, though, so is the commission. Judge Kathleen
Gearin has twice denied Canterbury's petition to stay open, because
she has chosen to order funding only for core government services.
Her desire to limit the court's role is understandable. But the fact
remains that the government took money from the track and its
horsemen to provide a service it is now failing to provide, which
has prevented all of them from doing business. That is dishonest,
unethical and potentially grounds for a lawsuit.
During the election season, candidates jawed incessantly about
creating jobs and helping out small businesses. Because so many are
putting party politics ahead of people, they are endangering jobs at
Canterbury -- including the 1,100 employed by the track and hundreds
more employed to care for the horses -- and squeezing the small
businesses run by owners and trainers.
The attorney for Canterbury and its horsemen will file an appeal of
Gearin's decision Tuesday morning. Sampson hopes for a quick
hearing, and the track has continued to take entries for upcoming
races, so racing can resume within 24 hours once Canterbury is
allowed to reopen. If that doesn't happen by early Thursday morning,
more races will be canceled.
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